Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?

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Sujet : Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?
De : polcott333 (at) *nospam* gmail.com (olcott)
Groupes : comp.theory sci.logic
Date : 25. May 2024, 06:28:24
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <v2rpda$2nvot$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 5/24/2024 6:20 PM, Richard Damon wrote:
On 5/24/24 6:20 PM, olcott wrote:
On 5/24/2024 4:39 PM, olcott wrote:
On 5/24/2024 4:03 PM, Richard Damon wrote:
On 5/24/24 4:01 PM, olcott wrote:
On 5/24/2024 12:25 PM, Richard Damon wrote:
On 5/24/24 1:10 PM, olcott wrote:
On 5/24/2024 2:37 AM, Fred. Zwarts wrote:
Op 23.mei.2024 om 19:04 schreef olcott:
typedef int (*ptr)();  // ptr is pointer to int function in C
00       int H(ptr p, ptr i);
01       int D(ptr p)
02       {
03         int Halt_Status = H(p, p);
04         if (Halt_Status)
05           HERE: goto HERE;
06         return Halt_Status;
07       }
08
09       int main()
10       {
11         H(D,D);
12         return 0;
13       }
>
The above template refers to an infinite set of H/D pairs where D is
correctly simulated by pure function H. This was done because many
reviewers used the shell game ploy to endlessly switch which H/D pair
was being referred to.
>
*Correct Simulation Defined*
    This is provided because every reviewer had a different notion of
    correct simulation that diverges from this notion.
>
    A simulator is an x86 emulator that correctly emulates at least one
    of the x86 instructions of D in the order specified by the x86
    instructions of D.
>
    This may include correctly emulating the x86 instructions of H in
    the order specified by the x86 instructions of H thus calling H(D,D)
    in recursive simulation.
>
*Execution Trace*
    Line 11: main() invokes H(D,D); H(D,D) simulates lines 01, 02, and 03
    of D. This invokes H(D,D) again to repeat the process in endless
    recursive simulation.
>
>
Of course this depends very much on the exact meaning of 'correct simulation', or 'correctly emulating'.
>
Not when these are defined above.
>
E.g., take the call to H(p, p). If H recognizes that it is a call to a H with the same algorithm as is it using itself, and it knows that itself returns a certain integer value K, than it can be argued that it is a correct emulation to substitute the call to H with this integer value K, which is assigned to Halt_Status. Then the simulation of D can proceed to line 04.
What we need is an exact definition of 'correct simulation', in this
>
No, you simply need to pay complete attention to the fact that this
has already been provided.
>
I have been over the exact same issue with dozens and dozen of people
though hundreds and hundreds of messages over two years.
>
Excpet that we have two contradictory definitions present,
>
Yes you have a definition of simulation where the x86 machine
language of D is simulated incorrectly or in the wrong order.
>
Nope. The UTM definition still simulates EVERY x86 machine language instruction of D simulated correctly in the exact order. The added requirement is that we look at a simulation that is never aborted.
>
H is a pure function that always returns 56 at some point other
than that H is isomorphic to a UTM.
>
>
I have learned from decades as a software engineer that complexity
is only manageable when it is isolated and minimized.
>
It is impossible to correctly understand termination analyzer H until
after one first has 100% perfectly complete and total understanding of
pure function simulator H/D pairs.
>
  So, do you agree with my comments about what you actual definitons are, and what they imply?
 
No I only agree that you are doing everything that you can to derail
an honest dialogue and it cannot possibly succeed against the basis
of my raw facts basis.

That you H, by just needing to be a "Pure Funtion" is not necessarily the computatinal eqivalent of a Turing Machine.
 
Totally moot for the subject line.

That your definition of "Correct Simulation" differs from that used in Computation Theory,
Totally moot for the subject line.

and thus the fact that H does abort its simulation means it is NOT a "UTM equivalent" and that your aborted correct simulation not reaching a final state is not =, by itself, proof that the machine represented by the input is non-halting.
 
The easily verified fact that for the infinite set of H/D pairs
where D is correctly simulated by pure function H that no D ever
reaches its own line 06 and halts.
It is like I say red cars are red in color and you disagree by saying blue cars are not red in color.

That you definition of "Correct Simulation" means that H actually simulated a call to H by going into H and looking at those instructions,
*YOU KEEP READING THINGS INTO MY SPEC THAT ARE JUST NOT THERE*
*YOU KEEP READING THINGS INTO MY SPEC THAT ARE JUST NOT THERE*
*YOU KEEP READING THINGS INTO MY SPEC THAT ARE JUST NOT THERE*
H is exactly a UTM except that it eventually halts and returns
56 even on non-halting inputs. Think of each H as counting the
number of instructions that it simulates and then stopping.

and not switch to looking at the machine the simulation being simulated is simulating.
 I will also add, that you agree that if you get the agreement that if H can do this, then you will produce an actual H that meets the requirements, and not just claim that it must be trivial to write, and such example program actually gives the claimed answer.
 
Until you understand that D correctly simulated by pure function H
never halts we can never get to the next step.

You agree that your funky "Infinite set of H/D pairs" is NOT what Linz or Sipser were using in their proof, and that you H and D are not built fully in conformance to the sample machines in the proofs.
 
Once you understand that H is correct about D proving that embedded_H
is correct about ⟨Ĥ⟩ is easy. Until then it remains impossible

 If you don't agree to these interpreations, a necessary precondition to coming to an agreement on what H sees, is to reach the agreement on what hte conditions imply and what those conditions actually are.
--
Copyright 2024 Olcott "Talent hits a target no one else can hit; Genius
hits a target no one else can see." Arthur Schopenhauer

Date Sujet#  Auteur
23 May 24 * Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?146olcott
24 May 24 +* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?23Richard Damon
24 May 24 i+* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?10olcott
24 May 24 ii`* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?9Richard Damon
24 May 24 ii `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?8olcott
24 May 24 ii  `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?7Richard Damon
24 May 24 ii   `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?6olcott
24 May 24 ii    `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?5Richard Damon
24 May 24 ii     `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?4olcott
24 May 24 ii      `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?3Richard Damon
24 May 24 ii       `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?2olcott
25 May 24 ii        `- Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?1Richard Damon
24 May 24 i`* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?12Fred. Zwarts
24 May 24 i +* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?5Richard Damon
24 May 24 i i`* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?4olcott
24 May 24 i i `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?3Richard Damon
24 May 24 i i  `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?2olcott
25 May 24 i i   `- Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?1Richard Damon
24 May 24 i `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?6olcott
24 May 24 i  `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?5Richard Damon
24 May 24 i   `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?4olcott
24 May 24 i    `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?3Richard Damon
24 May 24 i     `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?2olcott
25 May 24 i      `- Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?1Richard Damon
24 May 24 `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?122Fred. Zwarts
24 May 24  `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?121olcott
24 May 24   `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?120Richard Damon
24 May 24    `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?119olcott
24 May 24     `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?118Richard Damon
24 May 24      `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?117olcott
25 May 24       +- Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?1Richard Damon
25 May 24       `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?115olcott
25 May 24        `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?114Richard Damon
25 May 24         `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?113olcott
25 May 24          `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?112Richard Damon
25 May 24           `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?111olcott
25 May 24            +* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?108Richard Damon
25 May 24            i`* D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06107olcott
25 May 24            i `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06106Richard Damon
25 May 24            i  `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06105olcott
25 May 24            i   +* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06103Richard Damon
25 May 24            i   i`* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06102olcott
25 May 24            i   i `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06101Richard Damon
25 May 24            i   i  `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06100olcott
25 May 24            i   i   `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 0699Richard Damon
25 May 24            i   i    `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 0698olcott
25 May 24            i   i     `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 0697Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i      +* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 066olcott
26 May 24            i   i      i`* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 065Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i      i `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 064olcott
26 May 24            i   i      i  `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 063Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i      i   `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 062olcott
26 May 24            i   i      i    `- Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 061Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i      `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 0690olcott
26 May 24            i   i       `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 0689Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i        `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 0688olcott
26 May 24            i   i         `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 0687Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i          `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 0686olcott
26 May 24            i   i           `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 0685Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i            `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 0684olcott
26 May 24            i   i             `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 0683Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i              `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 0682olcott
26 May 24            i   i               `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 0681Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i                +* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 062olcott
26 May 24            i   i                i`- Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 061Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i                `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 0678olcott
26 May 24            i   i                 `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 0677Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i                  +* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 066olcott
26 May 24            i   i                  i`* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 065Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i                  i +* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 062olcott
26 May 24            i   i                  i i`- Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 061Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i                  i `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 062olcott
26 May 24            i   i                  i  `- Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 061Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i                  `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06 --- Dishonest?70olcott
26 May 24            i   i                   `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06 --- Dishonest?69Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i                    `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06 --- Dishonest?68olcott
26 May 24            i   i                     `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06 --- Dishonest?67Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i                      `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06 --- Dishonest?66olcott
26 May 24            i   i                       `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06 --- Dishonest?65Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i                        `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06 ---64olcott
26 May 24            i   i                         `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06 ---63Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i                          `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06 ---62olcott
26 May 24            i   i                           `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06 ---61Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i                            +* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06 --- Linz proof4olcott
26 May 24            i   i                            i`* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06 --- Linz proof3Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i                            i `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06 --- Linz proof2olcott
26 May 24            i   i                            i  `- Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06 --- Linz proof1Richard Damon
26 May 24            i   i                            `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06 --- Linz56olcott
26 May 24            i   i                             `* Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 06 --- Linz55Richard Damon
27 May 24            i   i                              `* A simulating halt decider applied to the The Peter Linz Turing Machine description ⟨Ĥ⟩54olcott
27 May 24            i   i                               `* Re: A simulating halt decider applied to the The Peter Linz Turing Machine description ⟨Ĥ⟩53Richard Damon
27 May 24            i   i                                `* Re: A simulating halt decider applied to the The Peter Linz Turing Machine description ⟨Ĥ⟩52olcott
27 May 24            i   i                                 `* Re: A simulating halt decider applied to the The Peter Linz Turing Machine description ⟨Ĥ⟩51Richard Damon
27 May 24            i   i                                  +* Re: A simulating halt decider applied to the The Peter Linz Turing Machine description ⟨Ĥ⟩4olcott
27 May 24            i   i                                  i`* Re: A simulating halt decider applied to the The Peter Linz Turing Machine description ⟨Ĥ⟩3Richard Damon
27 May 24            i   i                                  i `* Re: A simulating halt decider applied to the The Peter Linz Turing Machine description ⟨Ĥ⟩2olcott
27 May 24            i   i                                  i  `- Re: A simulating halt decider applied to the The Peter Linz Turing Machine description ⟨Ĥ⟩1Richard Damon
27 May 24            i   i                                  `* Re: A simulating halt decider applied to the The Peter Linz Turing Machine description ⟨Ĥ⟩46olcott
27 May 24            i   i                                   +* Re: A simulating halt decider applied to the The Peter Linz Turing Machine description ⟨Ĥ⟩3Richard Damon
27 May 24            i   i                                   i`* Re: A simulating halt decider applied to the The Peter Linz Turing Machine description ⟨Ĥ⟩2olcott
27 May 24            i   i                                   i `- Re: A simulating halt decider applied to the The Peter Linz Turing Machine description ⟨Ĥ⟩1Richard Damon
27 May 24            i   i                                   `* Re: A simulating halt decider applied to the The Peter Linz Turing Machine description ⟨Ĥ⟩42olcott
25 May 24            i   `- Re: D correctly simulated by pure function H cannot possibly reach its, own line 061Alan Mackenzie
26 May 24            `* Re: Can you see that D correctly simulated by H remains stuck in recursive simulation?2Fred. Zwarts

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