• PL Olcott
    626
    ...and the trouble with that is that there doesn't seem to be any obvious problem with Z.Banno

    So you can't see that the fact that Z does the opposite of whatever
    H says makes saying the correct thing a logical impossibility for H?
  • Banno
    25k
    Well, no. The correct thing to do is conclude that H is impossible; that there are things which cannot be computed.
  • PL Olcott
    626
    Well, no. The correct thing to do is conclude that H is impossible; that there are things which cannot be computed.
    8 hours ago
    Banno

    That is all that it takes to determine that the halting problem as defined is invalid.
    Another logically impossible problem is making a CAD system that can draw square
    circles. In other words it must draw a thing that <is> a Circle and simultaneously
    <is not> a Circle.

    All undecidable decision problems are simply invalid because their problem definition
    requires the logically impossible.
  • PL Olcott
    626
    Well, no. The correct thing to do is conclude that H is impossible; that there are things which cannot be computed.Banno

    When a human is asked a question that is defined to have no correct answer
    such as: What time it is (yes or no)? we know to reject the question and not
    blame the human.

    When a computer program is presented with data that has been defined to
    have no correct answer (Boolean return value) we blame the program and
    not the data.

    This is inconsistent. Professor Hehner and I both agree that any program
    specification that lacks a correct (Boolean return value) for some inputs
    proves that this specification is unsatisfiable thus incorrect.
  • Banno
    25k
    Repetition and appeal to (supposed) authority.
  • PL Olcott
    626
    ↪PL Olcott Repetition and appeal to (supposed) authority.Banno

    I keep trying to make my words more clear. That a PhD computer science professor perfectly agrees with my exact words provides a subtantial weight of evidence that I am not simply a crackpot.

    Most people start with the idea that I must be a crackpot thus pay no attenton to what I actually say and put ALL of their energy into pointing out mistakes that turn out to not exist.
  • Banno
    25k
    I wouldn't be here apart from trying to help articulate the point.

    That's why I've asked you to show as explicitly as you can where Carol's question occurs.

    In the other thread I suggested that the analogue would be "Will Program Z loop forever if fed itself as input?"Banno
  • PL Olcott
    626
    ↪PL Olcott I wouldn't be here apart from trying to help articulate the point.

    That's why I've asked you to show as explicitly as you can where Carol's question occurs.

    In the other thread I suggested that the analogue would be "Will Program Z loop forever if fed itself as input?"
    — Banno
    Banno

    That depends on what your H does and you didn't say.

    I have spent two full time years making the x86utm operating system so that I could make a real H and Z so I have complete proof what they do and why and how they do it. My H is called H and my current Z is called D.

    Any expert C programmer can follow this proof by examining all of its source-code.
    The key essence of this source-code is on page 1 of this paper.

    Termination Analyzer H is Not Fooled by Pathological Input D
    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/369971402_Termination_Analyzer_H_is_Not_Fooled_by_Pathological_Input_D
  • Banno
    25k
    Assume to reach a contradiction that there exists a program Halt(P, I) that solves the halting problem,Prof Kirk Pruhs

    :smile:
  • PL Olcott
    626
    ↪PL Olcott
    Assume to reach a contradiction that there exists a program Halt(P, I) that solves the halting problem,
    — Prof Kirk Pruhs
    Banno

    My H simulates its D until it can see that D keeps calling H in recursive
    simulation. Then it aborts this simulation and returns 0 for non-halting.
    Page 1 of my paper shows all of the details of this to any expert C programmer.
  • Banno
    25k
    What you have done is to display the contradiction that we all agree on. It's what you conclude from that which is problematic.
  • PL Olcott
    626
    ↪PL Olcott What you have done is to display the contradiction that we all agree on. It's what you conclude from that which is problematic.Banno

    These words may be a little too technical for you.

    It seems that everyone agrees with this:
    (a) When the halting problem is defined with a program
    specification that requires an H to report on the behavior
    of the direct execution of D(D) that does the opposite of
    whatever Boolean value that H returns then this is an
    unsatisfiable program specification.

    (b) An unsatisfiable program specification is merely
    the inability to do the logically impossible thus places
    no actual limit on anyone or anything.
  • Banno
    25k
    These words may be a little too technical for you.PL Olcott

    :wink: You don't have to be here. No need to respond if my comments are not useful.

    Or is it that what you have to say cannot be made sufficiently clear?

    You started this with Carol's question, went on to claim that Gödel's theorem was wrong, backtracked to Turing and now obfuscate.

    That it is possible to write a program which undermines H shows that H cannot be applied to all programs. Quod Erat Demonstrandum.
  • PL Olcott
    626
    You started this with Carol's question, went on to claim that Gödel's theorem was wrong, backtracked to Turing and now obfuscate.Banno

    I just totally proved my whole point if and only if you fully understand all of its words.
    I have to write them so that computer programmers and computer scientists can
    most easily understand them.

    This key point mostly uses ordinary words.
    The inability to do the logically impossible places no actual limit on anyone or anything.

    Anyone that agrees with the above point agrees with the complete essence of our proof.
  • Banno
    25k
    I just totally proved my whole point if and only if you fully understand all of its words.PL Olcott

    :rofl:

    If you would prove Turing wrong, you will need more than mere assertion.
  • PL Olcott
    626
    If you would prove Turing wrong, you will need more than mere assertion.Banno

    You did not pay attention to the words that were targeted for you:

    This key point mostly uses ordinary words.
    The inability to do the logically impossible places no actual limit on anyone or anything.

    Anyone that agrees with the above point agrees with the complete essence of our proof.
  • Banno
    25k
    We've already agreed that a reductio argument uses a logical impossibility to show that an assumption is in error; and that Turing's argument is a reductio.

    Hadn't we?

    That is, a logical impossibility places a limit on the viability of our assumptions... to adopt your odd wording.
    If one's assumptions lead to contradiction, then at least one is in error. Assuming we can produce H leads to contradiction. Hence we cannot produce H.
  • PL Olcott
    626
    If one's assumptions lead to contradiction, then at least one is in error. Assuming we can produce H leads to contradiction. Hence we cannot produce H.Banno

    We also cannot correctly determine the square root of a stack of pancakes.
    Logical impossibilities never create actual limits.
    Logical impossibilities never create actual limits.
    Logical impossibilities never create actual limits.
    Logical impossibilities never create actual limits.
  • Banno
    25k
    We also cannot correctly determine the square root of a stack of pancakes.PL Olcott
    Yep. Quite agree. If your conclusion is a logical impossibility, there is something amiss with your assumptions.

    Or with your process.
  • PL Olcott
    626
    Yep. Quite agree. If your conclusion is a logical impossibility, there is something amiss with your assumptions.Banno

    When the halting problem is defined such that solving it is logically impossible
    then we reject this problem definition as unsound for the same reason that
    we reject this question as unsound: What time is it (yes or no)?

    Every question that is defined to have no correct answer is an incorrect
    question.
  • Banno
    25k
    Yeah, OK. No progress to be made here. Publish your article and then invite me to the ceremony when you win the Turing Award so you can say "I told you so".
  • PL Olcott
    626
    ↪PL Olcott Yeah, OK. No progress to be made here. Publish your article and then invite me to the ceremony when you win the Turing Award so you can say "I told you so".Banno

    Like always there is no sense publishing anything until some people understand
    that the words are correct. There are now two people in the world that understand
    this and everyone else seems to be so sure that we are wrong that they can't
    even pay complete 100% attention to a single sentence.
  • Banno
    25k
    It's an inveterate issue in Psychoceramics.
  • PL Olcott
    626
    ↪PL Olcott Yeah, OK. No progress to be made here. Publish your article and then invite me to the ceremony when you win the Turing Award so you can say "I told you so".Banno

    I have a completely different proof that shows every single detail of
    how H does correctly determine the halt status of the impossible input.
  • Banno
    25k
    I'm sure you do.
  • PL Olcott
    626
    ↪PL Olcott It's an inveterate issue in Psychoceramics.Banno

    That a PhD computer science professor of decades has his own
    proof of this and agrees that my proof is correct provides sufficiently
    compelling evidence that this is not the case. He has been published
    several times in the two most prestigious computer science journals.
  • L'éléphant
    1.6k
    @PL Olcott "logically impossible" is not recognized in philosophy. It's either "illogical" or "impossible". The two are used in different contexts.

    Impossibility in philosophy is used in the physical event -- i.e. it's impossible to be in two places at the same exact time. Another one, it's impossible for humans to fly in the air.
    Illogical is what you mean when you say a circle cannot be a square. Of course you would object to my description as you might think, but squares and circles are physical objects. Actually, they are conceptual objects, hence, logical in the sense of "it makes sense by definition that a circle has 360 degree rotation while the sum of the degree of the square is also 360".
  • PL Olcott
    626
    PL Olcott "logically impossible" is not recognized in philosophy. It's either "illogical" or "impossible". The two are used in different contexts.L'éléphant

    Logically impossible is the strongest kind of impossible.
    A thing that is required to have simultaneous mutually exclusive properties
    like a square circle that must be round and must not be round is logically
    impossible. Making a perfect angel food cake using only house bricks for
    ingredients might be possible by rearranging the atoms of the bricks.
  • Banno
    25k
    "logically impossible" is not recognized in philosophy.L'éléphant

    Yeah, it is. (p & ~p). Contradiction.

    This entry is about worlds that are not possible, with “possible” understood in an unrestricted sense. Start with the intuitive idea of the totality of possible worlds, which capture all and only the genuine possibilities. The worlds we are interested in are not in there. These worlds are often called logically impossible worlds, as logical laws such as the Law of Non-Contradiction or the Law of Excluded Middle are assumed to be the most general and topic-neutral: they are supposed to hold at all possible worlds. From now on, we are talking of impossible worlds simpliciter, meaning worlds that are not possible with respect to an unrestricted notion of possibility, however this is further characterized.Impossible Worlds (Stanford Encyclopaedia, my bolding)



    i.e. it's impossible to be in two places at the same exact time.L'éléphant
    Tell that to an electron in a double-slit experiment.
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