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On 6/23/2025 2:37 AM, Mikko wrote:If the set of the premises is not the same it is not the same proof.On 2025-06-22 14:38:56 +0000, olcott said:There is a subset of proofs that have this requirement.
On 6/21/2025 11:01 PM, Alan Mackenzie wrote:False. There are other requirements. Every sentence of the sequence,In comp.theory olcott <polcott333@gmail.com> wrote:A proof is any sequence of steps such that its conclusionint DD()
{
int Halt_Status = HHH(DD);
if (Halt_Status)
HERE: goto HERE;
return Halt_Status;
}https://chatgpt.com/s/t_6857335b37a08191a077d57039fa4a76That's neither here nor there. The plain fact is you have NOT refuted
ChatGPT agrees that I have correctly refuted every
halting problem proof technique that relies on the above
pattern.
any proof technique. How could you, you don't even understand what is
meant by proof?
can be correctly determined to be necessarily true.
not just the last one, must either be a premise or follow from
earlier ones with an acceptable inference rule.
They typically are of the form that a conclusion is
proved definitely true within a set of assumptions.
Another form of this same proof only has expressions
of language known to be true as its premises.
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