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On 7/21/2024 9:24 AM, joes wrote:Which means you agree that HHH's aborting of its simuliation doesn't stop the behavior of DDD, but it continues until we find what it does.Am Sun, 21 Jul 2024 08:08:53 -0500 schrieb olcott:Correct.On 7/21/2024 6:37 AM, Richard Damon wrote:Yes. That doesn't mean that DDD itself would terminate.On 7/21/24 12:15 AM, olcott wrote:When the simulation stops running the whole program exits to the
operating system.
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No, it doesn't CHANGE the behavior, but the fact that HHH aborts its simulation of its input and returns ESTABLISHES the behavior of ALL copies of that DDD that call it.Because (a) We know that it is a logical impossibility for any decider
HHH to report on the halt status of any input that does the opposite of
whatever it reports.
(b) We know that a decider is not allowed to report on the behavior
computation that itself is contained within. Deciders only take finite
string inputs. They do not take executing processes as inputs. Thus HHH
is not allowed to report on the behavior of this int main() { DDD(); }.That IS exactly the input.The behavior of emulated DDD after it has been aborted
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changes the behavior of the directly existed DDD.
When the second call of what would otherwise be infinite recursionIt never WAS "otherwise infinite recursin" because this HHH ALWAYS ABORTED it input. You confuse the different problems in your set of problems with one program "changing" which doesn't actually happen.
is required to be aborted to prevent the infinite execution of the
first call this proves that HHH(DDD)==0 is correct even though
the directly executed DDD() halts.
No, because the decider HHH is not a UTM. PERIOD, The only version of HHH that acts like a UTM is the one that never aborts its simulation, and that one you have shown doesn't answer and thus is not a decider.Unless you think the idea of UTMs is wrong-headed nonsenseTherefore we map the finite string input to HHH(DDD) to the behaviorThe basis is the direct behaviour.
that it species on the basis of DDD correctly emulated by any pure
function HHH that can possibly exist.
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the behavior of DDD correctly emulated by HHH determines
the actual behavior specified by the input to HHH(DDD).
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