Sujet : Re: Unconventional partial halt decider and grounding to a truthmaker
De : noreply (at) *nospam* example.com (joes)
Groupes : comp.theory sci.logicDate : 17. May 2024, 09:09:42
Autres entêtes
Organisation : i2pn2 (i2pn.org)
Message-ID : <v26vrm$19bp2$1@i2pn2.org>
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User-Agent : Pan/0.145 (Duplicitous mercenary valetism; d7e168a git.gnome.org/pan2)
Am Thu, 16 May 2024 22:29:14 -0400 schrieb Richard Damon:
On 5/16/24 10:48 AM, olcott wrote:
On 5/16/2024 5:42 AM, Mikko wrote:
On 2024-05-15 15:06:26 +0000, olcott said:
On 5/15/2024 3:06 AM, Mikko wrote:
On 2024-05-14 14:32:26 +0000, olcott said:
I refer to transitioning through a specific state to indicate a
specific halt status value, for Turing Machines.
>
That does not satisfy the usual definition of "halt decider".
Yet it <is> an incremental improvement over both YES and NO are the
wrong answer for input D. YES <is> the correct answer and H can not SAY
this answer in the conventional way.
However, we could accept that as a solution to the halting problem if
one could prove that there is a Turing machine that can indicate
halting or non-halting that way for all computations.
>
Refuting the HP pathological program/input pair is the the full scope
of my theory of computation work. Even without my POD24 diagnosis I
would have no time to verify this against an infinite set of programs.
And you don't even get that one right.
Validation of POD24 as a robust early clinical end point of poor
survival in FL from 5225 patients on 13 clinical trials
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34614146/
Yep, perhaps some day soon we will be rid of your lies.
That’s low.
Your continuous cries of „liar” aren’t any better than Peter’s spam.
-- joes