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|    Message 261,918 of 262,912    |
|    Mikko to olcott    |
|    Re: A new foundation for correct reasoni    |
|    15 Dec 25 11:04:46    |
      XPost: comp.lang.prolog, comp.theory, sci.math       From: mikko.levanto@iki.fi              On 15/12/2025 01:14, olcott wrote:       > On 12/14/2025 4:05 AM, Mikko wrote:       >> On 13/12/2025 16:43, olcott wrote:       >>> On 12/13/2025 4:19 AM, Mikko wrote:       >>>> olcott kirjoitti 12.12.2025 klo 16.19:       >>>>> On 12/12/2025 2:50 AM, Mikko wrote:       >>>>>> olcott kirjoitti 11.12.2025 klo 16.17:       >>>>>>> On 12/11/2025 2:42 AM, Mikko wrote:       >>>>>>>> olcott kirjoitti 10.12.2025 klo 16.10:       >>>>>>>>> On 12/10/2025 4:04 AM, Mikko wrote:       >>>>>>>>>> olcott kirjoitti 8.12.2025 klo 21.09:       >>>>>>>>>>> On 12/8/2025 3:13 AM, Mikko wrote:       >>>>>>>>>>>> olcott kirjoitti 5.12.2025 klo 19.43:       >>>>>>>>>>>>> On 12/5/2025 3:38 AM, Mikko wrote:       >>>>>>>>>>>>>> olcott kirjoitti 4.12.2025 klo 16.06:       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> On 12/4/2025 2:58 AM, Mikko wrote:       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Tristan Wibberley kirjoitti 4.12.2025 klo 4.32:       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> On 30/11/2025 09:58, Mikko wrote:       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Note that the meanings of       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> ?- G = not(provable(F, G)).       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> and       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> ?- unify_with_occurs_check(G, not(provable(F, G))).       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> are different. The former assigns a value to G, the       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> latter does not.       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> For sufficiently informal definitions of "value".       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> And for sufficiently wrong ones too!       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> It is sufficiently clear what "value" of a Prolog       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> variable means.       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> % This sentence cannot be proven in F       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> ?- G = not(provable(F, G)).       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> G = not(provable(F, G)).       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> ?- unify_with_occurs_check(G, not(provable(F, G))).       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> false.       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> I would say that the above Prolog is the 100%       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> complete formal specification of:       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> "This sentence cannot be proven in F"       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>>>>>>> The first query can be regarded as a question whether "G =       >>>>>>>>>>>>>> not(provable(       >>>>>>>>>>>>>> F, G))" can be proven for some F and some G. The answer is       >>>>>>>>>>>>>> that it can       >>>>>>>>>>>>>> for every F and for (at least) one G, which is       >>>>>>>>>>>>>> not(provable(G)).       >>>>>>>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>>>>>>> The second query can be regarded as a question whether "G       >>>>>>>>>>>>>> = not(provable       >>>>>>>>>>>>>> (F, G))" can be proven for some F and some G that do not       >>>>>>>>>>>>>> contain cycles.       >>>>>>>>>>>>>> The answer is that in the proof system of Prolog it cannot       >>>>>>>>>>>>>> be.       >>>>>>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>>>>>> No that it flatly incorrect. The second question is this:       >>>>>>>>>>>>> Is "G = not(provable(F, G))." semantically sound?       >>>>>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>>>>> Where is the definition of Prolog semantics is that said?       >>>>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>>>> Any expression of Prolog that cannot be evaluated to       >>>>>>>>>>> a truth value because it specifies non-terminating       >>>>>>>>>>> infinite recursion is "semantically unsound" by the       >>>>>>>>>>> definition of those terms even if Prolog only specifies       >>>>>>>>>>> that cannot be evaluated to a truth value because it       >>>>>>>>>>> specifies non-terminating infinite recursion.       >>>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>>> Your Prolog implementation has evaluated G = not(provablel(F, G))       >>>>>>>>>> to a truth value true. When doing so it evaluated each side of =       >>>>>>>>>> to a value that is not a truth value.       >>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>> ?- unify_with_occurs_check(G, not(provable(F, G))).       >>>>>>>>> false.       >>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>> Proves that       >>>>>>>>> G = not(provable(F, G)).       >>>>>>>>> would remain stuck in infinite recursion.       >>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>> unify_with_occurs_check() examines the directed       >>>>>>>>> graph of the evaluation sequence of an expression.       >>>>>>>>> When it detects a cycle that indicates that an       >>>>>>>>> expression would remain stuck in recursive       >>>>>>>>> evaluation never to be resolved to a truth value.       >>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>> BEGIN:(Clocksin & Mellish 2003:254)       >>>>>>>>> Finally, a note about how Prolog matching sometimes differs       >>>>>>>>> from the unification used in Resolution. Most Prolog systems       >>>>>>>>> will allow you to satisfy goals like:       >>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>> equal(X, X).       >>>>>>>>> ?- equal(foo(Y), Y).       >>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>> that is, they will allow you to match a term against an       >>>>>>>>> uninstantiated subterm of itself. In this example, foo(Y)       >>>>>>>>> is matched against Y, which appears within it. As a result,       >>>>>>>>> Y will stand for foo(Y), which is foo(foo(Y)) (because of       >>>>>>>>> what Y stands for), which is foo(foo(foo(Y))), and so on.       >>>>>>>>> So Y ends up standing for some kind of infinite structure.       >>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>> Note that, whereas they may allow you to construct something       >>>>>>>>> like this, most Prolog systems will not be able to write it       >>>>>>>>> out at the end. According to the formal definition of       >>>>>>>>> Unification, this kind of “infinite term” should never come       >>>>>>>>> to exist. Thus Prolog systems that allow a term to match an       >>>>>>>>> uninstantiated subterm of itself do not act correctly as       >>>>>>>>> Resolution theorem provers. In order to make them do so, we       >>>>>>>>> would have to add a check that a variable cannot be       >>>>>>>>> instantiated to something containing itself. Such a check,       >>>>>>>>> an occurs check, would be straightforward to implement, but       >>>>>>>>> would slow down the execution of Prolog programs considerably.       >>>>>>>>> Since it would only affect very few programs, most implementors       >>>>>>>>> have simply left it out 1.       >>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>> 1 The Prolog standard states that the result is undefined if       >>>>>>>>> a Prolog system attempts to match a term against an       >>>>>>>>> uninstantiated subterm of itself, which means that programs       >>>>>>>>> which cause this to       >>>>>>>>> happen will not be portable. A portable program should ensure       >>>>>>>>> that wherever an occurs check might be applicable the built-in       >>>>>>>>> predicate       >>>>>>>>> unify_with_occurs_check/2 is used explicitly instead of the normal       >>>>>>>>> unification operation of the Prolog implementation. As its name       >>>>>>>>> suggests, this predicate acts like =/2 except that it fails if an       >>>>>>>>> occurs check detects an illegal attempt to instantiate a variable.       >>>>>>>>> END:(Clocksin & Mellish 2003:254)       >>>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>>> Clocksin, W.F. and Mellish, C.S. 2003. Programming in Prolog       >>>>>>>>> Using the ISO Standard Fifth Edition, 254. Berlin Heidelberg:       >>>>>>>>> Springer-Verlag.       >>>>>>>>       >>>>>>>> Thank you for the confirmation of my explanation of your error.       >>>>>>>       >>>>>>> >> Y will stand for foo(Y), which is foo(foo(Y)) (because of              [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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