Path: ...!eternal-september.org!feeder3.eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail From: Richard Heathfield Newsgroups: comp.theory Subject: Re: Turing Machine computable functions apply finite string transformations to inputs VERIFIED FACT Date: Tue, 29 Apr 2025 08:19:03 +0100 Organization: Fix this later Lines: 88 Message-ID: References: <0a2eeee6cb4b6a737f6391c963386745a09c8a01@i2pn2.org> <4818688e0354f32267e3a5f3c60846ae7956bed2@i2pn2.org> <65dddfad4c862e6593392eaf27876759b1ed0e69@i2pn2.org> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Injection-Date: Tue, 29 Apr 2025 09:19:04 +0200 (CEST) Injection-Info: dont-email.me; posting-host="a99ce2d194518084f1e3236eb6fd133d"; logging-data="1343340"; mail-complaints-to="abuse@eternal-september.org"; posting-account="U2FsdGVkX1/KKy2Tbdu0+TEHmVEjlxJaPPse0Zrri17c3tNUez0TQw==" User-Agent: Mozilla Thunderbird Cancel-Lock: sha1:HEZuRCskqJ78s4tPygX1hZqJNXE= In-Reply-To: Content-Language: en-GB Bytes: 5382 On 29/04/2025 05:57, olcott wrote: > On 4/28/2025 10:00 PM, dbush wrote: >> On 4/28/2025 10:50 PM, olcott wrote: >>> On 4/28/2025 3:13 PM, Richard Heathfield wrote: >>>> On 28/04/2025 19:30, olcott wrote: >>>>> On 4/28/2025 11:38 AM, Richard Heathfield wrote: >>>>>> On 28/04/2025 16:01, olcott wrote: >>>>>>> On 4/28/2025 2:33 AM, Richard Heathfield wrote: >>>>>>>> On 28/04/2025 07:46, Fred. Zwarts wrote: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> So we agree that no algorithm exists that can determine >>>>>>>>> for all possible inputs whether the input specifies a >>>>>>>>> program that (according to the semantics of the machine >>>>>>>>> language) halts when directly executed. >>>>>>>>> Correct? >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Correct. We can, however, construct such an algorithm >>>>>>>> just as long as we can ignore any input we don't like the >>>>>>>> look of. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> The behavior of the direct execution of DD cannot be derived >>>>>>> by applying the finite string transformation rules specified >>>>>>> by the x86 language to the input to HHH(DD). This proves that >>>>>>> this is the wrong behavior to measure. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> It is the behavior THAT IS derived by applying the finite >>>>>>> string transformation rules specified by the x86 language >>>>>>> to the input to HHH(DD) proves that THE EMULATED DD NEVER >>>>>>> HALTS. >>>>>> >>>>>> The x86 language is neither here nor there. >>>>> >>>>> Computable functions are the formalized analogue >>>>> of the intuitive notion of algorithms, in the sense >>>>> that a function is computable if there exists an >>>>> algorithm that can do the job of the function, i.e. >>>>> *given an input of the function domain it* >>>>> *can return the corresponding output* >>>>> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computable_function >>>>> >>>>> *Outputs must correspond to inputs* >>>>> >>>>> *This stipulates how outputs must be derived* >>>>> Every Turing Machine computable function is >>>>> only allowed to derive outputs by applying >>>>> finite string transformation rules to its inputs. >>>> >>>> In your reply to my article, you forgot to address what I >>>> actually wrote. I'm not sure you understand what 'reply' means. >>>> >>>> Still, I'm prepared to give you another crack at it. Here's >>>> what I wrote before: >>>> >>>> What matters is whether a TM can be constructed that can >>>> accept an arbitrary TM tape P and an arbitrary input tape D >>>> and correctly calculate whether, given D as input, P would >>>> halt. Turing proved that such a TM cannot be constructed. >>>> >>>> This is what we call the Halting Problem. >>>> >>> >>> Yet it is H(P,D) and NOT P(D) that must be measured. >> >> Not if it's the behavior of P(D) we want to know about, which >> it is. >> > > Wanting the square root of a rotten egg would do as well. > When P defines a pathological relationship with H it > is stupidly incorrect to expect the behavior of P to remain the > same. Or, to put it more simply, wanting a TM that can compute an incomputable function is futile. Indeed it is. Conclusion: Turing was right. -- Richard Heathfield Email: rjh at cpax dot org dot uk "Usenet is a strange place" - dmr 29 July 1999 Sig line 4 vacant - apply within