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On 10/15/2024 9:12 PM, Richard Damon wrote:Which makes no difference to HHH, or it isn't a pure functino.On 10/15/24 6:03 PM, olcott wrote:The difference in behavior is because DDD of theOn 10/15/2024 4:39 PM, joes wrote:>Am Tue, 15 Oct 2024 14:56:01 -0500 schrieb olcott:>On 10/15/2024 2:29 PM, joes wrote:>Am Tue, 15 Oct 2024 14:18:52 -0500 schrieb olcott:On 10/15/2024 10:32 AM, joes wrote:What is the same?Am Tue, 15 Oct 2024 07:33:47 -0500 schrieb olcott:It is the same as verifying that a conclusion logically follows formOn 10/15/2024 3:54 AM, Mikko wrote:Stipulative definitions can also not be correct. Correctness isOn 2024-10-14 16:05:20 +0000, olcott said:If X cannot be incorrect then disagreeing that X is correct is
>A stipulative definition is a type of definition in which a new orThe Wikipedia page does not say that. It only says that a
currently existing term is given a new specific meaning for the
purposes of argument or discussion in a given context.
*Disagreeing with a stipulative definition is incorrect*
stipulative definition itself cannot be correct.
incorrect.
simply out of scope. It can be rejected though. Is your best defense
really "it has no truth value"?
its premises when hypothesizing that the premises are true.In other words you insist on failing to understand that the behavior ofMeaning, DDD is terminating function, because it reaches its return,And not a function that can't be simulated by HHH.The article also says that the scope of a stipulative definition isOnce a stipulated definition is provided by its author it continues
restricted to an argument or discussion in given context.
to apply to every use of this term when properly qualified.
A *non_terminating_C_function* is C a function that cannot possibly
reach its own "return" instruction (final state) thus never
terminates.
even though HHH can't simulate the call to itself (because a simulator
terminates only when its input does, so it can't halt simulating
itself).
DDD after HHH aborts its emulation is different than the behavior that
requires HHH to abort its emulation.WDYM "after"?>
The executed DDD begins its trace before HHH(DDD)
is invoked.
>
The emulated DDD begins its trace only after HHH(DDD)
is invoked.
>
This makes it possible for HHH(DDD) to return to DDD
and impossible for any HHH(DDD) to return to any DDD.
>
Nope, since the emulated HHH in the emulation of DDD will do EXACTLY like the directly executed HHH, and thus that result is what a correct emulation needs to show.
>
relative execution order of DDD and HHH.
(a) The executed DDD is executed before HHH.
(b) DDD is emulated after HHH is executed.
This is what makes the behavior of DDD differentIn other words you are admitting that HHH isn't a pure function and thus not eligable to be your anaylzer. (DDD itself does nothing to break being a pure function, so if the program DDD does, then HHH can't be a pure function)
between these two cases.
You seem to be saying that the executed HHH must changeNope, it must answer based on the criteria, and that is was it the behavior of the full code provided as its input (which includes the code of the HHH that DDD calls, which must be the same code as the HHH that answered).
its own order of execution relative to its emulated DDD
such that the emulated DDD begins before its own emulator
starts running.
Is this what you mean?Just saying they are different doesn't make them different, you inability to point to the first instruction "correctly emulated" that differed from the actual execution shwos that you claim is just false.
Can you see that the execution order is different?
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