Yes, Wiki knows of "some" of the mathematicians who disagree with his more farflung interpretations. I know of more. I meet mathematicians in the flesh, you know; I don't have to consult to Wikipedia on this topic.
"Yes" you agree that you were lying in claiming that Chaitin's views are "widely" disputed?
No. I KNOW MORE ABOUT THIS THAN YOU DO.
First of all, none of this relates to the point that Chaitin made.
It was the entirety of the basis for Chaitin's statement.
You are just copying Harun Yahya's approach to biology: he does not understand the content, just skims through the literature for a scattered quote supporting his propagandistic need of the moment, without knowing the basis for any of the quotes or what they mean in context; and like you, he explains away his inability to impress anybody who does have knowledge of the content of the subject by claiming that they must feel threatened by the profundity of his statements.
And I gave you a BBC documentary, full of facts.
Which I can't watch right now, for reasons that are neither your fault nor mine; give it a rest. Your summary of it, if accurate, indicates that, aside from "facts", it is also full of sensationalized slanders, as you could verify for yourself if you cared to.
Here are some more facts for you Bob: MacNamara retired from the US Army Air Forces after WWII at the rank of LIUTENANT COLONEL.
I knew he worked at Willow Run plant (all our tank/plane factories were modifications of auto plants); I did not know he was that high-ranking so young. So OK, he had more occasions to hear Curtis LeMay than I did. But I remember LeMay well: how could I not? He was the "Sarah Palin" of my youth, the running mate who absolutely could not shut up, as subtle as a baseball bat to the skull about expressing his views. The picture of him as somebody who would only support bombing if, after compassionately considering all other alternatives that might spare civilian casualties, he reluctantly concluded that it was a "necessity", is not the LeMay I heard. Possibly, his public statements were political pandering, to the more primitive elements of the population, and he himself was not really so crude in his views. Or possibly, MacNamara could not fathom LeMay being so alien, or it did not suit MacNamara's purposes to portray him so (MacNamara has been trying for forty years to deny that he was part of a clique whose mental lapses bumbled us into a horrific and pointless war).
Does this matter? You wanted him to cite him as authority for the position that Germans and Japanese conducted "trials" just like Americans did, which is false, and really silly. Remember our discussion of the Nazis systematically dismantling any concept of judiciary or rule of law?
Have you even read Spengler?
I told you before, I have
tried to read him, found him tedious and not worth slogging through very far.
The actual fall of "civilization" itself could stretch on for thousands of years (e.g. Rome) during which time he advocated power politics.
Yeah, like a lot of Germans, he thought that combining "nationalism" and "socialism" was the appropriate response to the historical juncture. How'd that work out for them? How much did it have to do with what was really about to happen, none of which Spengler had a clue about?
It was the West that had always tried to fit in the neoplatonic version of "God" into his view of the ordered universe via an ordered logic.
They were following the lead of the Arabs, who were once capable of contributing to science. This is what is so exasperating about the current form of Islam and its relentless promotion of emotionalism over reason and ignorance over knowledge, with the inevitable consequences of violence and poverty: IT DOESN'T HAVE TO BE THIS WAY! You are carefully sifting through the different strains of Islam, separating the wheat from the chaff: and keeping all the chaff, throwing away all the wheat.
Of course your question ASSUMES a will, you asked me why do I "bother" as if I had a choice in any of my actions. And yes, God is the only author of our "existence."
But you want long arguments about who is to "blame" for this or that act of war, or for this or that miscommunication within this thread. GOD, obviously, is the only one to blame for nuking Hiroshima, starting the Israeli/Palestinian conflict, and muddling the information about the current status of Zeno's Paradox research, etc.
No one asked you about this thread in the suggestions forum when you randomly brought it up.
The topic of this thread was whether other people had experienced glitches preventing posts to this board. You yourself had had trouble posting here at that time; I didn't just have trouble posting, I could not for a long time post at all. I was informing Brian that indeed, some people had had the glitch very badly; but not to worry, I didn't care whether that thread died or not. And I didn't: I left you the last word, but-- apparently-- you didn't want it. You insisted that the glitches could not possibly have been my motivation for not posting any more (you apparently believe that *I* have a will, even if *you* don't!). Oh no, I must have stopped posting because I'm so threatened by the profundity of your gabble.
This is why you've been so "frustrated". After coming back, you first called me "stupid and senseless".
I called your
posts stupid and senseless: that is, you were insisting that I pick back up where we left off, and where we left off was that you had been posting all this remarks from which I could not tell what the hell you were even trying to claim, and any straightforward interpretation (you were claiming that you were unable to count to four, and did not believe that anybody else could either?) was too stupid to believe it was really what you intended.
But now, I've shown that: EVEN RESPECTED MATHEMATICIANS ARE SAYING THE SAME THING.
But you don't even know what Chaitin means by what he's saying!
He is devoting his life to working with extremely subtle problems of logic, although his talents could suit him to many other, more lucrative lines of work. How does this fit with his flamboyant statements about the "failure" of logic? One clue for you: he says the "obvious" implication of Goedel is that logic fails; to mathematicians, "obvious" is often a pejorative; try reading it as "the naive interpretation..." One reason there are not too many people who work in foundational mathematics (aside from the fact that it is a genuinely difficult topic) is that, indeed, the first reaction a lot of people have is "This is hopeless." Chaitin is working on the problem of what does work, and what doesn't, which is a very deep and interesting question, which I would enjoy discussing, if you have any actual interest in the substance.
What Chaitin shows is that mathematical problems come in "clumps" of solvable and unsolvable questions. His equation-set is a big clump (the free parameter generates an infinite series of equation-sets; related to an infinite series of such infinite series) of impenetrable insolubility. Suppose we calculated the "delimited Omega" number, the probability that a random Turing machine chosen out of those
described by a string of no more than 30 bits (that is, the first trillion cases) halts. That would calculate: but we cannot know until we are finished how long that would take; the barrier is that we would need techniques for answering the "Halting Problem" adequate to resolve all the first trillion cases, and cannot know in advance how complicated such a set of techniques would have to get (we know that
no finite set of techniques suffices to answer the Halting Problem for
all cases). But we can get away with answering just "most" of the Halting Problems if we are content to know
just the first bit of the delimited Omega number, the one that tells us whether >50% or <50% of the first trillion computer programs "work". That first bit will not be stable, for a long time: if we move on to 31-bit machines (up to the first
two trillion) etc., that bit may flip from 1 ("most programs work") to 0 ("most don't") many times. It will not keep flipping forever: either 1 or 0 really is the final answer (as the bit-length goes to infinity, Omega actually "converges" in the sense of Cauchy!), but we can never know whether it has settled down to the final answer, or has one more flip-flop to make, or trillions of flip-flops. Every flip-flop represents a huge "clump" of working/non-working programs, sufficient to overwhelm the probability established at lower levels.
What do we actually care about, in this context? As I intimated last time, the "actual" question (in my sense of "actual") is whether the equation-sets for the behavior of the actual world are in a clump that presents "mostly solvable" or "mostly unsolvable" questions. In Goedel's (non-rigorous, in my view) theistic language, he would say that GOD CHOSE to create a "mostly comprehensible" universe. Logic does not
require that the universe be mostly comprehensible: logic
allows for the possibility of a mostly incomprehensible universe-- but c0de, if you think that the results we have found indicate that logic
requires the universe to be mostly incomprehensible, that is just a misunderstanding on your part. As a matter of fact, it turns out that mathematics does actually work, for lots of problems in the actual world: as shown by, for example, the functionality of the Internet (which depends on that intricate mathematics of quantum mechanics, despite the grave difficulty that semi-evolved primates have in wrapping their brains around it).
You continue to treat this thread as if it were a conversation between you and a wrongheaded person named BobX, when your professed beliefs would imply rather that you should accept these postings as direct revelations from Allah, more precious to you than the Qur'an, since they are addressed to you personally in a language that you can actually read.
At the very most, you can say that you have your opinion, and I have mine.
I can say more than that: that my opinion is founded in information about the substance of the subject-matter, while yours is not.
But you can no longer claim that the point of view which I hold is simply invalid.
Well, I would no longer say that your recent posts have "appeared senseless or stupid": at least you have added some clarity about what your point of view IS, which was so difficult to figure out from what you were saying earlier.