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by tialaramex
2173 days ago
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Yet, it's a conjecture because it hasn't been proven. It's unprovable in fact. Church-Turing is in effect a statement of belief about what computation is. Strong Church-Turing is a statement of belief about our universe. But it's normal to accept Church-Turing (though not Strong Church-Turing) because once you follow what Gödel, Church and Turing had uncovered the alternatives seem intuitively crazy - Church-Turing has to be right. It's like accepting Modus Ponens and Modus Tollens. I can't present a useful logical argument for why you should accept those because my logical argument will end up relying on them, if you won't accept them then we've nothing further to talk about. |
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Thanks for bringing up strong Church-Turing. It was interesting to read about it here (https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/church-turing/#StroWeakFo...) I think I had a broader interpretation of Church-Turing than I should. I was thinking that if we somehow discovered a working oracle machine on Mars, it would invalidate Church-Turing. But that article says:
> the thesis concerns what a human being can achieve when working by rote, with paper and pencil (ignoring contingencies such as boredom, death, or insufficiency of paper)