You can define the terminal state to be on, off, or a plate of spaghetti and be consistent with the rules of the game. — fishfry
You're confusing yourself on this point.
That's funny, because according to SEP, he used the asymptotic density of the sequence 0, 1, 0, 1, ... to argue that the final state must be 1/2. He made that exact argument using that exact sequence. So you are mistaken, because Thompson has used the exact same reasoning I did. — fishfry
What is the sum of the infinite divergent sequence +1, -1, +1, ...? Now mathematicians do say that this sequence has a sum; they say that its sum is 1/2. And this answer does not help us, since we attach no sense here to saying that the lamp is half-on.
If there is a sense of "know" that means "acknowledging, recognizing", then you are saying that we do know another's pain (at least, sometimes). I agree, but this is contrary to your earlier statements that we do not know another's pain. — Luke
BUT!!!!!! You have not defined the terminal state. So why do you think there should be a sensible answer for what it is?
I don't see how your expressing the problem in pseudocode adds anything. We all have agreed to it long ago, even before you wrote it down. That's the premise of the problem. But the question is about the terminal state, which is not defined. — fishfry
After all, there is no number that can serve as the limit of the sequence 0, 1, 0, 1, ... — fishfry
var isLampOn = false
function pushButton()
{
isLampOn = !isLampOn
}
while (true) {
pushButton()
}
echo isLampOn
division by 2 ... results in even number of total divisions. — SpaceDweller
Under assumption that those 2 minutes must pass the lamp will therefore be off with console.log(isLampOn) — SpaceDweller
var isLampOn = false
function pushButton()
{
isLampOn = !isLampOn
}
var i = 120
while (true) {
wait i *= 0.5
pushButton()
}
echo isLampOn
What is wrong with that? — Ludwig V
You may say that it is possible to divided indefinitely, but that does not mean that infinite divisibility is possible. Take pi for example. You can get a computer to produce the decimal extension for pi, "indefinitely", but you never succeed in reaching an infinite extension. Divisibility is the very same principle. Some mathematical principles allow one to divide indefinitely, but you never reach infinite division. That is because infinite division, therefore infinite divisibility, is logically impossible. — Metaphysician Undercover
People have, I think, confused saying (1) it is conceivable that each of an infinity of tasks be possible (practically possible) of performance, with saying (2) that is conceivable that all of an infinite number of tasks should have been performed. They have supposed that (1) entails (2). And my reason for thinking that people have supposed this is as follows. To suppose that (1) entails (2) is of course to suppose that anyone who denies thinking (2) is committed to denying (1). Now to deny (1) is to be committed to holding, what is quite absurd, (3) that for any given kind of task there is a positive integer k such that it is conceivable that k tasks of the given kind have been performed, but inconceivable, logically absurd, that k + 1 of them should have been performed. But no-one would hold (3) to be true unless he had confused logical possibility with physical possibility. And we do find that those who wish to assert (2) are constantly accusing their opponents of just this confusion. They seem to think that all they have to do to render (2) plausible is to clear away any confusions that prevent people from accepting (1).
No. I'm saying that there's no natural way to define the terminal state. There are lots of ways to defined it. I define it as a plate of spaghetti. That's entirely consistent with the rules of the lamp problem, which only defines the state of the lamp at the points of the sequence — fishfry
and does not appear to engage with any of the points I've made — fishfry
There is a fundamental problem with identifying supertasks with series limits — sime
P2 is false. As shown by P1. — fishfry
How in this great vast wonderful world of ours, does P3 justify P2? They're not even related. — fishfry
(1) The sequence 1, 2, 3, 4, ... never stops. It has no last element. You can always find the next one.
(2) Under the successive halving hypothesis, all numbers are counted. Because as can be plainly seen, there is no number that isn't. — fishfry
But it is not inconceivable, and therefore is is not necessarily false, and therefore it is not metaphysically impossible. — fishfry
Thompson's lamp does not lead to a contradiction showing that supertasks are impossible. That's your interpretation, which you are failing to explain or defend to my satisfaction. — fishfry
I simply do not understand why you jump to saying that means it's metaphysically impossible. — fishfry
You could probably help me out by clearly defining metaphysically impossible. — fishfry
Can you clarify which sense you mean? — fishfry
When a mathematician says that 1/2 + 1/4 + 1/8 + ... = 1, they don't mean that you can perform this calculation with pencil and paper before lunchtime. They mean that the two expressions on either side of the equal sign denote the same real number. — fishfry
What is "evidence" in a metaphysical realm? — jgill
How do you make this conclusion? — Metaphysician Undercover
But that's YOUR hypothesis, not mine. — fishfry
We can determine whether or not something entails a contradiction. If time is infinitely divisible then supertasks are possible. Supertasks entail a contradiction. Therefore, time being infinitely divisible entails a contradiction. — Michael
These arguments only show that if I recite the natural numbers as described then I have recited all the natural numbers, but this does nothing to prove that the antecedent is possible, and it is the possibility of the antecedent that is being discussed. — Michael
You have repeatedly asked me what happens if we go backwards, saying "1" at 60 seconds, "2" at 30 seconds, and so forth. That also is a purely hypothetical thought experiment. Why on earth are you proposing hypothetical non-physical thought experiments, then saying, "Oh that's impossible!" when I attempt to engage? — fishfry
Argument 1
Premise: I said "0", 30 seconds after that I said "1", 15 seconds after that I said "2", 7.5 seconds after that I said "3", and so on ad infinitum.
What natural number did I not recite?
...
Argument 2
Premise: I said "0", 30 seconds before that I said "1", 15 seconds before that I said "2", 7.5 seconds before that I said "3", and so on ad infinitum.
What natural number did I not recite?
...
These arguments only show that if I recite the natural numbers as described then I have recited all the natural numbers, but this does nothing to prove that the antecedent is possible, and it is the possibility of the antecedent that is being discussed. — Michael
You yourself proved P2 true — fishfry
But you just proved P2 yourself! You agreed that under the hypothesis of being able to recite a number at successively halved intervals of time, there is no number that is the first to not be recited. — fishfry
I have agreed repeatedly that we can't "count all the natural numbers backwards" since an infinite sequence has no last element. — fishfry
a. I said "0", 30 seconds after that I said "1", 15 seconds after that I said "2", 7.5 seconds after that I said "3", and so on ad infinitum
b. I said "0", 30 seconds before that I said "1", 15 seconds before that I said "2", 7.5 seconds before that I said "3", and so on ad infinitum
Here is our premise:
P1. In both (a) and (b) there is a bijection between the series of time intervals and the series of natural numbers and the sum of the series of time intervals is 60.
However, the second supertask is metaphysically impossible. It cannot start because there is no largest natural number to start with. Therefore, P1 being true does not entail that the second supertask is metaphysically possible.
Therefore, P1 being true does not entail that the first supertask is metaphysically possible.
Given P2, what is the first natural number not recited? I seem to remember having asked you this several times already. — fishfry
People disagree with the premise because we are not confident we can use such intuitions when the — unintuitive — concept of infinity is involved. — Lionino
The fallacy in his reasoning is that it does not acknowledge that for all tn >= t1/2 the lamp is on iff the lamp was off and I pressed the button to turn it on and the lamp is off iff the lamp was on and I pressed the button to turn it off.
True. And that implies time is discrete how? — Lionino
I'm not trying to find a solution, just to understand what's going on. Not so much why it's wrong, but why anyone would think it was right. Where does the illusion come from? — Ludwig V
It isn't a physically possible task. — noAxioms
Though I don't quite see how your B2 follows from your B1. — Ludwig V
You mean that we don't know the state of X at the last step before t(1), even though X must have been in one state or the other? — Ludwig V
This puzzles me. Is this t(1) the same t as the t(1) in C3? It can't be. There must be a typo there somewhere. — Ludwig V
One question, then - The state of X at any t(n), depends on its predecessor state at t(n-1), doesn't it? Isn't that a definition? Why is it inapplicable to t(1)? — Ludwig V
I have wondered whether one could replace the Thompson lamp with a question, such as whether the final number was odd or even. That would work if you start with an odd divisor and don't express everything in decimals. Perhaps it would work for all examples if you ask whether the number of steps taken is odd or even when the minute is up. I think. — Ludwig V
The lack of a first step does not prevent the beginning of the task — noAxioms
I described exactly how to do that — noAxioms
