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On 6/11/2025 4:06 AM, Mikko wrote:Most likely I wouldn't say so but hard to be sure as you never showOn 2025-06-10 17:12:24 +0000, olcott said:If I show the steps of solving for X in an algebra
On 6/10/2025 2:25 AM, Mikko wrote:Likewise, what is not a self-evident truth does not become oneOn 2025-06-08 06:00:50 +0000, olcott said:When self-evident truth are not understood they remain
On 6/8/2025 12:49 AM, Mikko wrote:No, it is not. It was an attempt to deceive with a false ad hominem.On 2025-06-04 16:27:48 +0000, olcott said:What I just said is a truism, tautology, self-evident truth.
On 6/4/2025 2:32 AM, Mikko wrote:Yes, it does.On 2025-06-03 20:28:36 +0000, olcott said:When I provide proof that you cannot understand
On 6/3/2025 2:55 AM, Mikko wrote:You have never shown any proof of anything. But a verifiable and verifiedOn 2025-06-02 15:23:15 +0000, olcott said:I have shown that proof too many times and people
On 6/2/2025 1:56 AM, Mikko wrote:It proves nothing without a proof that DDD is correctly simulated by HHH.On 2025-06-01 21:41:36 +0000, olcott said:It completely matters. DDD correctly simulated by HHH
On 6/1/2025 6:30 AM, Mikko wrote:It does not matter whether a particular simulation does or does notOn 2025-05-30 15:41:59 +0000, olcott said:void DDD()
On 5/30/2025 3:45 AM, Mikko wrote:A function does not have a behaviour. A function has a value forOn 2025-05-29 18:10:39 +0000, olcott said:That is the same as saying a function with infinite
On 5/29/2025 12:34 PM, Mr Flibble wrote:The simulation of the behaviour should be equivalent to the real🧠 Simulation vs. Execution in the Halting ProblemTo the best of my knowledge a simulated input
In the classical framework of computation theory (Turing machines),
simulation is not equivalent to execution, though they can approximate one
another.
always has the exact same behavior as the directly
executed input unless this simulated input calls
its own simulator.
behaviour.
recursion must have the same behavior as a function
without infinite recursion.
every argument in its domain.
A function is not recursive. A definition of a function can be
recursive. There may be another way to define the same function
without recursion.
A definition of a function may use infinite recursion if it is also
defined how that infinite recursion defines a value.
Anyway, from the meaning of "simulation" follows that a simulation
of a behaviour is (at least in some sense) similar to the real
behaviour. Otherwise no simulation has happened.
{
HHH(DDD);
return;
}
The *input* to simulating termination analyzer HHH(DDD)
specifies recursive simulation that can never reach its
*simulated "return" instruction final halt state*
reach its "return" instruction.
proves the exact behavior that the input to HHH(DDD)
actually specifies.
denied the very obvious verified facts of it.
fact is that DDD halts. An obvious conseqence of that fact is that every
report that means 'DDD does not halt' is wrong.
this does not mean that I did not provide proof.
self-evident.
when falsely claimed to be a self-evindet truth.
For example, "what I don't understand is not a proof" is not self-evident.
It depends on the additional information "I can understand proofs" that
you can't have.
problem and you do not know as much as how to count
to five this does not mean that my proof is incorrect.
Doesn't matter as long as you have no counter-arguments.Likewse, "When I provide proof that you cannot understand this does notMost every rebuttal of my work changes the words that
mean that I did not provide proof" is not self-evident as it assumes
there are proofs that I cannot understand at least to the extent that I
can recognise them as proofs. But that assumption is not self-evident
and not true.
I actually said and then rebuts these changed words.
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