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computable sets and functions, Turing degrees, c.e. degrees, models of computability, primitive recursion, oracle computation, models of computability, decision problems, undecidability, Turing jump, halting problem, notions of computable randomness, computable model theory, computable equivalence relation theory, arithmetic and hyperarithmetic hierarchy, infinitary computability, $\alpha$-recursion, complexity theory.

2 votes
Accepted

Is every pair of writable reals one-tape-ITTM-computable?

How nice to hear that you are reading that paper. The paper appeared as: J. D. Hamkins and D. E. Seabold, Infinite Time Turing Machines With Only One Tape, Mathematical Logic Quarterly, vol. 47, iss …
Joel David Hamkins's user avatar
4 votes
Accepted

Computable function

The function is computable. It is either the constant $1$ function, if there are arbitrarily long sequences of consecutive $1$s in the expansion of the number $e$ (and I guess you mean the decimal exp …
Joel David Hamkins's user avatar
4 votes
Accepted

Prove existence of different programs printing each other code

Any Turing-complete model of computation will have programs with this property. Specifically, let $\varphi_e$ denote the function computed by program $e$, in whatever such system you favor. Define two …
Joel David Hamkins's user avatar
7 votes

A question on s-m-n Theorem

This is an interesting question! You are asking that if $f(x,y)$ is computable in $x$ and $y$, but there are only finitely many possibilities for the curried function $f_x$, is there a finite list of …
Joel David Hamkins's user avatar
3 votes
Accepted

Game of Chess and axiomatic systems

Steven Landsburg has now answered the question in the case of ordinary finite chess, which because it is finite has no undecidability or independence phenomenon to speak of. Meanwhile, the kind of p …
Joel David Hamkins's user avatar
7 votes

Are there proofs of Rice Theorem without using the undecidability of some problem?

Here is a proof based on the recursion theorem, rather than a reduction of an undecidable problem. Rice's Theorem. Suppose that $P$ is any set of computable functions, which is not empty and not all …
Joel David Hamkins's user avatar
10 votes
Accepted

A question about primitive recursive functions

The answer is yes. First, let $g$ be a total computable function whose rate of growth is too fast for it to be primitive recursive, such as the diagonal Ackermann function. Now, define $f(k)=2n$, if $ …
Joel David Hamkins's user avatar
7 votes
Accepted

Finding inputs that make an algorithm run forever

There is such an algorithm, for which one cannot find a computable $S$ on which it runs forever. There is a computable tree with no computable infinite branch. See the Wikipedia entry on König's lemm …
Joel David Hamkins's user avatar
6 votes

Models of computation with decidable halting problem?

The classical proof that the halting problem is undecidable is extremely flexible and applies to innumerable non-classical models of computability. The argument goes like this. Suppose that we have a …
Joel David Hamkins's user avatar
10 votes
Accepted

Can we represent computable functions by r.e. sets ?

If your hypothesis has a degree of uniformity, so that we may uniformly enumerate $f^{-1}X$ from an enumeration of $X$, that is, if given an index $e$ for a c.e. se $W_e$, then we may compute an index …
Joel David Hamkins's user avatar
5 votes
Accepted

Infinite set with/without infinite c.e. subsets

I assume that you mean $M=\{ y\mid \neg\exists x\lt y\ \varphi_x=\varphi_y\}$. And in this case, the argument you've already given seems to solve the problem. If $M$ had an infinite c.e. subset $A$, t …
Joel David Hamkins's user avatar
15 votes

Proof there is no algorithm to compute the intersection of a line and sinusoidal wave?

You may be interested in Richardson's theorem, an amazing theorem which implies that the problem of determining for a given mathematical expression $E(x)$, of particularly simple form, whether $E(x)=0 …
Joel David Hamkins's user avatar
0 votes

function application

The down function is moving along (something essentially equivalent to) the usual Cantor pairing function $\mathbb{N}\times\mathbb{N}\to\mathbb{N}$, since it moves from each point on a diagonal $x+y=\ …
Joel David Hamkins's user avatar
11 votes

Are there natural, small, and total recursive functions that are not primitive recursive?

If one does not require that the function is computable, then there is an abundance of natural answers, since there are of course many natural infinite binary sequences that are not primitive recursiv …
Joel David Hamkins's user avatar
14 votes
Accepted

What about the fastest-growing non-computable function ?

An easy diagonalization shows that for every countable family of functions $g_n:\mathbb{N}\to\mathbb{N}$, there is a function $f$ eventually exceeding any one of them. Just let $f(n)=\sup_{k\leq n}g_k …
Joel David Hamkins's user avatar

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