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From: Richard Damon <richard@damon-family.org>
Newsgroups: comp.theory
Subject: Re: How the requirements that Professor Sipser agreed to are exactly
met
Date: Tue, 13 May 2025 07:46:55 -0400
Organization: i2pn2 (i2pn.org)
Message-ID: <b7e048a9a61fd5ebf8c68c6506d81fc15f3a07b5@i2pn2.org>
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On 5/13/25 12:41 AM, olcott wrote:
> On 5/12/2025 11:11 PM, Richard Damon wrote:
>> On 5/12/25 10:48 PM, olcott wrote:
>>> On 5/12/2025 9:26 PM, Richard Heathfield wrote:
>>>> On 13/05/2025 00:58, Ben Bacarisse wrote:
>>>>> On the other hand, you are spending a lot of time arguing about his
>>>>> knowledge and use of C. Yes, it's awful. He knows very little C and
>>>>> the code is crap, but that/is/ a straw man -- it's the simplest
>>>>> part of
>>>>> his argument to fix.
>>>>
>>>> Although it was an attempt to motivate him to improve the code, it
>>>> has become blindingly obvious that he's not interested, which is
>>>> precisely why I am going to stop bothering.
>>>>
>>>
>>> Do you really think that nit picky details
>>> can refute the gist of what I am saying
>>> that needs none of these details?
>>
>> Since you have yet to show that ANY of your claims are actually making
>> the point you want, you should be looking for small gains.
>>
>>>
>>> int DD()
>>> {
>>> int Halt_Status = HHH(DD);
>>> if (Halt_Status)
>>> HERE: goto HERE;
>>> return Halt_Status;
>>> }
>>
>> Which isn't a program that can be simulated until you pair it with the
>> HHH that it calls, and that will be a different program input for each
>> HHH that it pairs with.
>>
>>>
>>> DD correctly simulated by any pure simulator
>>> named HHH cannot possibly terminate thus proving
>>> that this criteria has been met:
>>
>> So, you can prove that for HHH being a pure simulator, it won't reach
>> the end, but only after creating an input that calls that HHH, and
>> thus can't be decided on by any other HHH that you can think of.
>>
>>>
>>> <MIT Professor Sipser agreed to ONLY these verbatim words 10/13/2022>
>>> If simulating halt decider H correctly simulates its
>>> input D until H correctly determines that its simulated D
>>> would never stop running unless aborted then
>>>
>>> H can abort its simulation of D and correctly report that D
>>> specifies a non-halting sequence of configurations.
>>> </MIT Professor Sipser agreed to ONLY these verbatim words 10/13/2022>
>>>
>>
>> Yes, *THAT* HHH is allowed to abort, but only because it doesn't.
>
> This only has one meaning.
> *its simulated D would never stop running unless aborted*
>
Right, but not restricted to the partial simulation that H does, it meas
the actual CORRECT AND COMPLETE simulation of D would never stop running.
By your definution, a decider can just stop at any point and say that is
all I can do, this isn't halting.
The problem is your system starts by breaking the rules, as you D isn't
a program as required, since you exclude the H it calls, allowing you to
try to get away with changing it, but all that does is show you have
always been a liar.