Re: Indirect Reference Changes the Behavior of DDD() relative to DDD emulated by HHH

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Sujet : Re: Indirect Reference Changes the Behavior of DDD() relative to DDD emulated by HHH
De : richard (at) *nospam* damon-family.org (Richard Damon)
Groupes : comp.theory
Date : 29. Aug 2024, 23:52:27
Autres entêtes
Organisation : i2pn2 (i2pn.org)
Message-ID : <886530a80bd9fa079c015a7dfa9645f9b3604a8a@i2pn2.org>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 8/29/24 10:04 AM, olcott wrote:
On 8/29/2024 3:00 AM, Mikko wrote:
On 2024-08-28 11:46:58 +0000, olcott said:
>
On 8/28/2024 2:33 AM, Mikko wrote:
On 2024-08-27 13:04:26 +0000, olcott said:
>
On 8/27/2024 12:45 AM, joes wrote:
Am Mon, 26 Aug 2024 18:03:41 -0500 schrieb olcott:
On 8/26/2024 7:42 AM, Ben Bacarisse wrote:
Mike Terry <news.dead.person.stones@darjeeling.plus.com> writes:
On 23/08/2024 22:07, Ben Bacarisse wrote:
>
We don't really know what context Sipser was given.  I got in touch
at the time so I do know he had enough context to know that PO's
ideas were "wacky" and that had agreed to what he considered a "minor
remark". Since PO considers his words finely crafted and key to his
so-called work I think it's clear that Sipser did not take the "minor
remark" he agreed to to mean what PO takes it to mean!  My own take
if that he (Sipser) read it as a general remark about how to
determine some cases, i.e. that D names an input that H can partially
simulate to determine it's halting or otherwise.  We all know or
could construct some such cases.
>
Exactly my reading.  It makes Sipser's agreement natural, because it
is both correct [with sensible interpretation of terms], and moreover
describes an obvious strategy that a partial decider might use that
can decide halting for some specific cases.  No need for Sipser to be
deceptive or misleading here, when the truth suffices.  (In particular
no need to employ "tricksy" vacuous truth get out clauses just to get
PO off his back as some have suggested.)
>
Yes, and it fits with his thinking it a "trivial remark".
>
That aside, it's such an odd way to present an argument: "I managed to
trick X into saying 'yes' to something vague".  In any reasonable
collegiate exchange you'd go back and check: "So even when D is
constructed from H, H can return based on what /would/ happen if H did
not stop simulating so that H(D,D) == false is correct even though D(D)
halts?".  Just imagine what Sipser would say to that!
Is this an accurate phrasing, pete?
>
Deciders never compute the mapping of the computation
that they themselves are contained within.
>
Why not? A decider always either accepts or rejects its input.
>
The computation that they themselves are contained within cannot
possibly be an input.
>
What would prevent that if the input language permits computations?
>
 When a TM takes its own machine description as input
this is not always that same behavior as the direct
execution of the machine. It is not the same because
it is one level of indirect reference away.
LIE.
And you have accepted that it is a lie because you have failed to point out the step correctly emulated that differed.

 *How one level of indirect reference changes the answer*
Does this sentence:
"This sentence is not true"
have a truth value? No, it is not a truth bearer.
 Does this sentence:
This sentence is not true: "This sentence is not true"
have a truth value? Yes it is true.
 
For example, every computation can be given to an UTM. That computation
may involve a decider X that uses the same input language. What
What prevents giving X the same input as the UTM was given?
>
One level of indirect reference away from the
computation itself can have different behavior
But there isn't a "indirect reference" in the input, there is an actual copy.

 The direct execution of DDD() has the benefit of
HHH having already aborted its emulation of DDD.
 DDD emulated by HHH does not have this same benefit.
 
Which doesn't change the BEHAVIOR of the input, just the ability to compute that behavior.
The correct emulation of the input doesn't differ from the behavior of the direct execution.
You just confuse what the decider can compute with what is reality as you confuse truth with knowledge.

Date Sujet#  Auteur
24 May 25 o 

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