PL Olcott is simply confused. Besides being rude. — Alkis Piskas
No, it is wrong to say that a question has a correct answer. — Alkis Piskas
Well, depending on the question-statement, I would rather say ambiguous or circular or self-contradictory or --if it refers to an argument-- a fallacious argument.
I think that the attributes "correct" and "incorrect" are too general and/or ambiguous themselves. — Alkis Piskas
Check this: When I visited TPF a few minutes ago, I had in mind to check about your recent activity (comments)! — Alkis Piskas
How can you call this (in Japanese)? :smile: — Alkis Piskas
You are not wrong. And I think you do have a clue, and a correct one. — Alkis Piskas
I would check more of your recent messages but it's got late. Maybe tomorrow ... — Alkis Piskas
Well, after having a reasoning with myself, I came to the conclusion that omission cannot be an incorrect answer from Carol. — javi2541997
(Carol could answer with a word that is synonymous with no) — PL Olcott
Carol can say or fail to say cannot possibly provide a correct answer to that question from the stipulated solution set of {yes, no}. — PL Olcott
Unless synonyms or omissions are allowed, yes, Carol will always fail to answer this stipulated question set — javi2541997
So Carol's question when posed to Carol meets the definition of an incorrect question
in that both answers from the solution set of {yes, no} are the wrong answer. — PL Olcott
Likewise no computer program H can say what another computer program D will do
when D does the opposite of whatever H says. — PL Olcott
What I disagree with, is that an omission from Carol is not necessarily an incorrect answer — javi2541997
OK. I don't get this. I thought we were debating about Carol — javi2541997
It <is> the lack of a correct answer thus
Can Carol correctly answer “no” to this [yes/no] question?
has (a) yes (b) no (c) anything else as not a correct answer to Carol's question
thus proving that anything that Carol can say or fail to say is not a correct answer
when posed to Carol. — PL Olcott
OK. But why is the question being asked to Carol if it will end up in an incorrect answer? — javi2541997
When the solution set is restricted to {yes, no} and no element of this solution set is a correct answer from Carol then the question posed to Carol is incorrect.
— PL Olcott
Well, depending on the question-statement, I would rather say ambiguous or circular or self-contradictory or --if it refers to an argument-- a fallacious argument.
I think that the attributes "correct" and "incorrect" are too general and/or ambiguous themselves. — Alkis Piskas
The supposed outcome is that no computer program A can say what another computer program B will do when B does the opposite of whatever A says
But what if A just prints "B will do the opposite of whatever I say it will do"?
So I'm unconvinced. — Banno
↪PL Olcott Sure. What's unclear to me is what it is you think this tells us about the halting problem. — Banno
So presumably you mean something else by”self contradiction”, but it is unclear to me what that might be. — Banno
Carol answers no without this being a paradox because there is no possibility of being "correct". As in: can she [answer correctly]? no, she cannot. — Antony Nickles
↪PL Olcott perhaps that is not as clear as you seem to think. My guess is that a much more formal account is needed. The problem is that “self” is ambiguous. — Banno
// The following is written in C // 01 typedef int (*ptr)(); // pointer to int function 02 03 int D(ptr x) 04 { 05 int Halt_Status = H(x, x); 06 if (Halt_Status) 07 HERE: goto HERE; 08 return Halt_Status; 09 }
↪PL Olcott Sure, nice. So whereabouts in such a coding are we going to see the equivalent of (p & ~p)? Where's the demonstration? — Banno
I hope not, and that I've misunderstood, because (this sentence is not true) cannot be false. — Banno
Self-reference itself is not problematic. So, for instance the following sentence is true and self-referential. This sentence contains five words. Hence, further, "This statement is not provable in F" may be self-referential but true. — Banno
Good. I must have misread you previously."This sentence is not true." is not a truth bearer and thus cannot be true
or false. — PL Olcott
Sure. Apart from some difficulty in your saying G is a language. I take it you mean the statement G?When an expression of language G asserts that it is not provable in F
G := (F ⊬ G) then to be proven in F requires a sequence of inference
steps in F. — PL Olcott
Unclear.Since we are proving that G is unprovable in F then these steps must
prove that they themselves do not exist — PL Olcott
Gödel does not prove in F that some statement in F is not provable. — Banno
...We are therefore confronted with a proposition which asserts its own unprovability. 15 ... (Gödel 1931:43-44) — PL Olcott
But there is no proof of G in F. That's the point of G. — Banno
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.