Sujet : Re: Ben's agreement that D must be aborted by H
De : polcott333 (at) *nospam* gmail.com (olcott)
Groupes : comp.theoryDate : 22. Jul 2024, 22:47:11
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <v7mk0v$qr0g$3@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 7/22/2024 4:25 PM, joes wrote:
Am Mon, 22 Jul 2024 14:50:08 -0500 schrieb olcott:
On 10/14/2022 7:44 PM, Ben Bacarisse wrote:
Python <python@invalid.org> writes:
>
I don't think that is the shell game. PO really /has/ an H (it's
trivial to do for this one case) that correctly determines that P(P)
*would* never stop running *unless* aborted. He knows and accepts that
P(P) actually does stop. The wrong answer is justified by what would
happen if H (and hence a different P) where not what they actually are.
>
In other words: "if the simulation were right the answer would be
right".
I don't think that's the right paraphrase. He is saying if P were
different (built from a non-aborting H) H's answer would be the right
one.
>
But the simulation is not right. D actually halts.
But H determines (correctly) that D would not halt if it were not
halted. That much is a truism.
Why did you dig up a 2 year old post that doesn't even agree with you?
Ben is the only one that agrees:
"But H determines (correctly) that D would not halt
if it were not halted. That much is a truism."
It is also a truism that any input that must be aborted to prevent the
non-termination of the simulating termination analyzer does specify
non-terminating behavior or it would never need to aborted.
Changing HHH to abort changes the behaviour of DDD, which calls it.
What's wrong is to pronounce that answer as being correct for the D
that does, in fact, stop.
It's certainly dishonest to claim support from an expert who clearly
does not agree with the conclusions. Pestering, and then tricking,
someone into agreeing to some vague hypothetical is not how academic
research is done. Had PO come clean and ended his magic paragraph with
"and therefore 'does not 'halt' is the correct answer even though D
halts" he would have got a more useful reply.
>
You are conflating two different process instances that have different
process states. The D correctly simulated by H is an entirely different
process than D(D) directly executed in main().
Same input, same output.
D correctly emulated by H specifies recursive emulation that must be
aborted. D(D) directly executed in main() does not specify recursive
emulation that must be aborted.
Eh, it does. Simulation doesn't make a difference.
The directly executed D(D) cannot possibly stop running unless
H aborts its simulation of its D. This conclusively proves
that even the directly executed D(D) does specify recursive
simulation that must be aborted at some point.
Let's keep in mind this is exactly what he's saying:
"Yes [H(P,P) == false] is the correct answer even though P(P)
halts."
Why? Because:
"we can prove that Halts() did make the correct halting decision
when we comment out the part of Halts() that makes this decision and
H_Hat() remains in infinite recursion"
-- Copyright 2024 Olcott "Talent hits a target no one else can hit; Geniushits a target no one else can see." Arthur Schopenhauer