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On 7/1/2025 6:32 AM, Richard Damon wrote:Right, but finite stings can represent Turing Macines.On 6/30/25 9:34 PM, olcott wrote:Because TM's only take finite string inputsOn 6/30/2025 8:12 PM, Richard Damon wrote:>On 6/30/25 2:30 PM, Mr Flibble wrote:>On Sun, 29 Jun 2025 22:39:10 -0400, Richard Damon wrote:>
>On 6/29/25 3:51 PM, Mr Flibble wrote:>On Sun, 29 Jun 2025 15:00:35 -0400, Richard Damon wrote:>
>Remember, the simulator must be simulating the INPUT, and thus to goNo. If HHH is simulating DDD then HHH can detect a call to itself being
past the call HHH instruction, the code must be part of the input, and
the input needs to be a constant.
passed DDD within DDD and can assert at that point that the input is
non-
halting.
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/Flibble
And thus isn't simu;ating THE INPUT, and that the input isn't a PROGRAM.
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Also, what if DDD is using a copy of HHH, as per the proof program,
which might have variations in the code.
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Sorry, just shows you don't understand the problem.
No. A simulator does not have to run a simulation to completion if it can
determine that the input, A PROGRAM, never halts.
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/Flibble
Right, but the program of the input DOES halt.
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The directly executed DDD() *IS NOT AN INPUT*
Then you are lying about having followed the proof.
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and no directly executed TM is a finite string
no TM's take directly executed TMs as inputs.
Directly executed Turing machines have always been>
outside of the domain of any function computed by
a Turing machine therefore directly executed Turing
machines have never contradicted the decision of
any halt decider.
Nope, which shows your stupidity.
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By that logic, Simple mathematics is outside the domain of any function computed by a Turing Machine, as numbers themselves are not finite strings, just representable by them.
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Your failure to rebute this just proves that you have no idea what you are talking about.
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How do Turing Machines do math via representations, but can't handle programs via representations.
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Your comments about the "vagueness" of representations just shows that the issue isn't actually in the representations, but your own understand of it, becuase you just don't understand the concepts.
>>>
Halt deciders compute the mapping from the behavior
that their finite string inputs actually specifies.
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Right, which specify a representation of a program, and thus the mapping needed is derived from the behavior of that program.
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