Re: Simulation vs. Execution in the Halting Problem --- CHALLENGE

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Sujet : Re: Simulation vs. Execution in the Halting Problem --- CHALLENGE
De : polcott333 (at) *nospam* gmail.com (olcott)
Groupes : comp.theory sci.logic comp.ai.philosophy
Date : 15. Jun 2025, 21:02:28
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <102n8sk$13mp8$2@dont-email.me>
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 26 27 28 29
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 6/15/2025 2:01 PM, Richard Damon wrote:
On 6/15/25 11:27 AM, olcott wrote:
On 6/15/2025 4:46 AM, Mikko wrote:
On 2025-06-14 13:44:30 +0000, olcott said:
>
On 6/14/2025 6:26 AM, Mikko wrote:
On 2025-06-13 17:59:23 +0000, André G. Isaak said:
>
On 2025-06-13 09:36, olcott wrote:
On 6/13/2025 6:53 AM, Mikko wrote:
>
Nothing is permanent. But you can (and to some extent do) maintan a web
page as long as you need it for usenet discussions.
>
I want people to be able to validate my work 50 years after I am dead.
A web-page will not work for this.
>
Usenet is dying. Do you seriously think it will be around in 50 years?
>
Some of its contents might still be on some web page.
>
Storing every text message ever written seems
to take < 1.0 TB.
>
Doesn't matter. Unlikely that anyone would even notice that you wanted
a validation of something.
>
>
Anyone with sufficient technical competence carefully
studying what I have said that is not so biased against
my position that they can actually pay complete attention
will understand that I am correct.
 Nope, only someone as mentally deranged as yourself would believe your lies.
 
>
If this was not the case then there could be a correct
rebuttal to what I am saying now. Instead of any correct
rebuttal all that has been provided is persistently
false assumptions.
 There has been, but it has appearently been over you head.
 You have demonstarted this by making this claim many times, and the errors you have ignored pointed out.
 
>
A termination analyzer / partial halt decider is
required to report on the behavior of the sequence
of state transitions that its input actually specifies.
It is not allowed to report on anything else.
>
 Right, and that sequence of states spedified by that input, is the sequence of states actually generated by that program when run,
int main()
{
   DDD(); // calls HHH(DDD) that is not allowed to report
}        // on the behavior of its caller.
Richard pretends to not understand that a function
that calls another function is not itself the actual
input to the function that it calls.
void DDD()
{
   HHH(DDD);
   return;
}
When I challenge anyone to show DDD correctly simulated
by simulating termination analyzer HHH can possibly reach
its own simulated termination analyzer they ignore this
challenge because:
(a) They know that they are lying.
(b) They don't hardly understand these things at all and
     don't understand my challenge.
(c) I don't know of any third option.
THAT FACT THAT NOT ONE PERSON HAS MET THIS CHALLENGE
IN SEVERAL YEARS IS VERY STRONG EVIDENCE THAT I AM CORRECT.
--
Copyright 2025 Olcott "Talent hits a target no one else can hit; Genius
hits a target no one else can see." Arthur Schopenhauer

Date Sujet#  Auteur
15 Jun 25 * Re: Simulation vs. Execution in the Halting Problem --- CHALLENGE2olcott
15 Jun 25 `- Re: Simulation vs. Execution in the Halting Problem --- CHALLENGE1Richard Damon

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