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On 8/10/24 6:41 PM, olcott wrote:The key error of the halting problem proofs all of theseOn 8/10/2024 4:53 PM, Richard Damon wrote:But there ccould be, and the behavior of it is what matters.On 8/10/24 5:37 PM, olcott wrote:>On 8/10/2024 4:33 PM, Richard Damon wrote:>On 8/10/24 5:18 PM, olcott wrote:>On 8/10/2024 3:58 PM, Richard Damon wrote:>On 8/10/24 4:36 PM, olcott wrote:>>>
As I have countlessly proven it only requires enough correctly
emulated steps to correctly infer that the input would never
reach is "return" instruction halt state.
Except that HHH does't do that, since if HHH decides to abort and return, then the DDD that it is emulating WILL return, just after HHH has stopped its emulation.
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You just confuse the behavior of DDD with the PARTIAL emulation that HHH does, because you lie about your false "tautology".
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Denying a tautology seems to make you a liar. I only
say "seems to" because I know that I am fallible.
Claiming a false statement is a tautology only make you a liar.
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In this case, you lie is that the HHH that you are talking about do the "correct emulation" you base you claim on.
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That is just a deception like the devil uses, has just a hint of truth, but the core is a lie.
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What I say is provably correct on the basis of the
semantics of the x86 language.
Nope.
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The x86 language says DDD will Halt if HHH(DDD) returns a value.
HHH is called by main() there is no directly executed DDD()
any where in the whole computation.
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Except in your requirements, and we can see what it does by adding a call to DDD from main, since nothing in your system calls main.
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All that you need to know is that there is not any
directly executed DDD() anywhere in the computation.
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