But probably only because it is NP-complete.
One example of a zip bomb is the file 42.zip, which is a zip file consisting of 42 kilobytes of compressed data, containing five layers of nested zip files in sets of 16, each bottom-layer archive containing a 4.3-gigabyte (4294967295 bytes; 4 GiB − 1 B) file for a total of 4.5 petabytes (4503599626321920 bytes; 4 PiB − 1 MiB) of uncompressed data.
The other interesting question is how to account for forms of non-temporal knowledge
So if we say "A implies a contradiction" is false, it is the same as saying "A does not imply a contradiction" — Lionino
This will all be explained in my forthcoming magisterial book introducing Hegelian-Semiotic-Process-Thomism — Count Timothy von Icarus
You are importing "the axioms of the theory." They are nowhere to be found. — Leontiskos
You know equally well that ¬P follows. — Leontiskos
Since one entails the other but other does not entail one, we may say that everytime «A implies a contradiction» is false, «A does not imply a contradiction» is true; but it is not everytime «A does not imply a contradiction» is true that «A implies a contradiction» will be false. Therefore there is an assymetrical relationship between the two statements quoted.
The prover confirms my intuition:
(a→¬(b∧¬b)) does not entail ¬(a→(b∧¬b))
¬(a→(b∧¬b)) entails (a→¬(b∧¬b)) — Lionino
(a→¬(b∧¬b)) — flannel jesus
In a certain sense, we might be inclined to say that P(I) = O in the same way we would like to say 2+2 just is 4. However, if I includes enough nodes then all of the world's super computers running P(I) until the heat death of the universe still won't have been able to actually compute O yet.
So then, in a very important functional sense P(I) is not "the same thing as O." — Count Timothy von Icarus
"a implies this particular non-contradiction" — flannel jesus
the goal anyway is to translate "A does not imply a contradiction", not any other phrase. — Lionino
Elvis is not a man – ¬A
Elvis is a man does not imply that Elvis is both mortal and immortal – (A → ¬(B and ¬B))
These two do not entail that Elvis is a man. — Lionino
Elvis is a man does not imply that Elvis is both mortal and immortal – (A → ¬(B and ¬B)) — Lionino
Is that the right English translation of that? — flannel jesus
would you say A → (B or ¬B) can be worded as "Elvis is a man does not imply that Elvis is both mortal and immortal" — flannel jesus
Thinking of the two as timelessly equivalent — Count Timothy von Icarus
"Sometimes universals like "All men are mortal" are not mere inductive generalisations that require that we already know that Socrates is mortal. They might have a law-like nature and so we believe them to be true because they fit with our best scientific theories. Indeed this seems to be the case with "All men are mortal". That is a scientific fact, not just an observation." — SE.phil
Is this about all computation then and what I wrote above irrelevant?But the "Scandal of Deduction," is about why we find the results of deduction and computation surprising and informative. We are physical beings. We do not compute in "no time at all." — Count Timothy von Icarus
I think it should be worded as "Elvis is a man DOES imply that elvis is NOT simultaneously immortal and mortal".
It positively implies something, rather than "does not" imply something. — flannel jesus
That much I can agree with under a formalist/nominalist view of mathematics. If we take that mathematical objects are platonic objects, where, by definition, the two would be timelessly equivalent, does the Scandal of Deduction make mathematical platonism troublesome?
If you think the above is an exemplification of the rebuttal, do you think it is a valid argument? The only way I see is by denying β which is denying the laws of chemistry, which is back to the problem of induction (how do you know every DNA degenerates?)
Is this about all computation then and what I wrote above irrelevant?
Do (A implies B) and (A implies notB) contradict each other?
What makes the Hamiltonian Path problem intractable is precisely the extremely large number of operations and this can be true for any program provided it has enough steps. — Count Timothy von Icarus
They are found in "S". Or you can just replace "S" with axioms of the theory. Axioms are naturally assumed.
...
I don't. I know that S and ¬P can't coexist. I know that S, so ¬P can't be the case. ¬¬P is P. — Lionino
<Lionino's "reductio" seems to be ambiguous between senses (2) and (3)> — Leontiskos
(S∧¬P)→(B∧¬B)
S
∴ P — Lionino
(S∧¬P)→(B∧¬B)
S
∴ P — Lionino
The phrase «A does not imply a contradiction» really means specifically «A being true, it does not imply a contradiction». I think this meaning is indeed encapsulated in A→¬(B∧¬B), especially when it can be translated as «A implies True». — Lionino
Allen never leaves the shop without Brown (¬A ⇒ ¬B)
Then why not reference that in the OP? — Bob Ross
...it just takes forever if the input is large. — Count Timothy von Icarus
However, if I includes enough nodes then all of the world's super computers running P(I) until the heat death of the universe still won't have been able to actually compute O yet. — Count Timothy von Icarus
So then, in a very important functional sense P(I) is not "the same thing as O." — Count Timothy von Icarus
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