Re: The error of the halting problem

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Sujet : Re: The error of the halting problem
De : richard (at) *nospam* damon-family.org (Richard Damon)
Groupes : comp.theory sci.logic
Date : 04. Jun 2024, 04:26:15
Autres entêtes
Organisation : i2pn2 (i2pn.org)
Message-ID : <v3lu07$2uv03$3@i2pn2.org>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 6/3/24 10:14 PM, olcott wrote:
On 6/3/2024 8:58 PM, Richard Damon wrote:
On 6/3/24 9:51 PM, olcott wrote:
On 6/3/2024 8:44 PM, Richard Damon wrote:
On 6/3/24 8:59 PM, olcott wrote:
On 6/3/2024 7:55 PM, Richard Damon wrote:
On 6/3/24 4:53 PM, olcott wrote:
For any program H that might determine whether programs halt, a
"pathological" program D, called with some input, can pass its own
source and its input to H and then specifically do the opposite of what
H predicts D will do. No H can exist that handles this case. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halting_problem
>
The way that the halting problem is conventionally understood is that H
must correctly answer yes or no to an input that contradicts both
answers, thus H is being asked a question isomorphic to the Liar
Paradox: Is this sentence true or false: "This sentence is not true." ?
>
But it doesn't reduce to that, as the decider was fixed in code first, and then, by using that code, a question is constructed WITH A RIGHT ANSWER, that just isn't the answer that this decider happens to give.
>
You just don't seem to understand logic well enough to understand that not that subtitle difference.
>
>
In other words you are trying to get away with saying
that it is only random chance that H gets the wrong
answer not that the game is rigged against H.
>
>
>
There is nothing "random" about it, if there was there would be a chance it could get it right.
>
>
Then why did you say it was random?
"just isn't the answer that this decider happens to give."
>
But the answer the decider gives isn't random, because algorithms are not random.
>
 Then explain exactly how this is not deception:
"just isn't the answer that this decider happens to give."
Because the decider WILL give some answer, as it was programmed for any particular answer.
A priori, we don't know that that answer will be, but we know that it will be wrong when we run the computation on the question.
Why don't you understand that.
H(x, x) will give some difinitive answer for EVERY x (and it may be different for different xs).
THe fact that Turing Machine are POWERFUL enough to be able to build an input x, that can use the use the algorithm of the decider to get the answer it WILL GIVE, and then act the opposite, makes it powerful enough to not be able to decide on every input.

 
>
When H is asked a yes/no question where both answers are
contradicted by its input *IT IS A FREAKING RIGGED GAME*
>
But both answers aren't wrong. Remember, the question is built to make a SPECIFIC decider wrong, and by its algorithm, it will give a SPECIFIC answer to each SPECIFIC question.
>
 You can't get away with that head game by pretending
to not understand what infinite an set of H/D pairs is.
But it doesn't matter.
The key is that EVERY element of that infinite set gives the wrong answer for its particular input, or it doesn't answer (which is also a "wrong answer").
NOTHING allows one HH to look at a DIFFERENT input then it was given, to argue about its answer.
And, each machine gets a different input, as for HH to be able have something to decide on, the "template" DD has to be converted to an actual instance DD[HH] that is unique for each HH.

 I really hope you don't condemn yourself to Hell over this.
But I was just having fun being a Troll... Is Hell worth that?
I myself would not take the chance.
 

Date Sujet#  Auteur
3 Jun 24 * The error of the halting problem21olcott
4 Jun 24 +* Re: The error of the halting problem17Richard Damon
4 Jun 24 i`* Re: The error of the halting problem16olcott
4 Jun 24 i +* Re: The error of the halting problem14Richard Damon
4 Jun 24 i i`* Re: The error of the halting problem13olcott
4 Jun 24 i i `* Re: The error of the halting problem12Richard Damon
4 Jun 24 i i  `* Re: The error of the halting problem11olcott
4 Jun 24 i i   +* Re: The error of the halting problem9Richard Damon
4 Jun 24 i i   i`* Re: The error of the halting problem8olcott
4 Jun 24 i i   i `* Re: The error of the halting problem7Richard Damon
4 Jun 24 i i   i  `* Re: The error of the halting problem6olcott
4 Jun 24 i i   i   +- Re: The error of the halting problem1Richard Damon
4 Jun 24 i i   i   +* Re: The error of the halting problem3joes
4 Jun 24 i i   i   i`* Re: The error of the halting problem --- G is untrue in PA2olcott
5 Jun 24 i i   i   i `- Re: The error of the halting problem --- G is untrue in PA1Richard Damon
4 Jun 24 i i   i   `- Re: The error of the halting problem1Mikko
4 Jun 24 i i   `- Re: The error of the halting problem1joes
4 Jun 24 i `- Re: The error of the halting problem1Mikko
4 Jun 24 `* Re: The error of the halting problem3Mikko
4 Jun 24  `* Re: The error of the halting problem2olcott
5 Jun 24   `- Re: The error of the halting problem1Richard Damon

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