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On 5/5/2024 5:36 AM, Fred. Zwarts wrote:
No, the decider is wrong if it gives the wrong answer.Those N steps were simulated correctly, but the fact that it stops after N steps make it an incorrect simulation.In other words a decider is wrong unless it never
stops simulating an non-halting input?
If I order a diner in the restaurant and only the first few steps are done correctly (writing down the order, bringing the order to the kitchen), but then the operation is aborted, we cannot say that the order was processed correctly, even though any step executed was correct and nobody can point to a step before the abort that was wrong. It is the abort itself that makes it wrong. Similarly, a simulation that aborts is not a correct simulation.
Olcott will probably insist that the waiter did a good job, even if I do not get my diner, because every step of the waiter before he aborted the order was correct.
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