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On 6/4/2025 8:43 PM, Richard Damon wrote:No, Russell's Paradox showed a fundamental error in "Naive" Set Theory. ZFC did nothing with Russell's Paradox, except to define a system that can't support it, but still was able to handle a large portion of the problems that the original theory was trying to be used on.On 6/4/25 11:50 AM, olcott wrote:Likewise with the definition of Russell's ParadoxOn 6/4/2025 2:04 AM, Mikko wrote:>On 2025-06-03 21:39:46 +0000, olcott said:>
>They all say that HHH must report on the behavior of>
direct execution of DDD()
No, they don't say that. A halting decider (and a partial halting
decider when it reports) must report whether the direct execution
of the computation asked about terminates. Unless that computation
happens to be DDD() it must report about another behaviour instead
of DDD().
>yet never bother to notice that the directly executed DDD() is>
the caller of HHH(DDD).
To say that nobody has noticed that is a lie. Perhaps they have not
mentioned what is irrelevant to whatever they said. In particular,
whether DDD() calls HHH(DDD) is irrelevant to the requirement that
a halting decider must report about a direct exection of the
computation the input specifies.
>
*People have ignored this for 90 years*
*People have ignored this for 90 years*
*People have ignored this for 90 years*
>
The only possible way that HHH can report on the
direct execution of DDD() is for HHH to report on
the behavior of its caller:
So?
>
It *IS* a fact that to be correct, it needs to answer about the direct executiom of the program that input represents.
>
That is DEFINITION.
>
until ZFC showed that this definition is complete
nonsense.
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