Eodnhoj7 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 01, 2025 5:48 am
Quite the contrary an input is merely a point of intention of what we are trying to understand within a specific framework. The input is a byproduct of intention, we want to see something within a given framework so we seek something to measure through the framework.
Every input stream can be represented as a natural number (n1). The program itself too (n2). The output stream too (n3). So, we have a set of three-tuples (n1,n2,n3) that inherently mean nothing. It is just three associated natural numbers. You can see more in these numbers but you don't have to.
Eodnhoj7 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 01, 2025 5:48 am
Quite the contrary an input is merely a point of intention of what we are trying to understand within a specific framework. The input is a byproduct of intention, we want to see something within a given framework so we seek something to measure through the framework.
Every input stream can be represented as a natural number (n1). The program itself too (n2). The output stream too (n3). So, we have a set of three-tuples (n1,n2,n3) that inherently mean nothing. It is just three associated natural numbers. You can see more in these numbers but you don't have to.
Every natural number can be represented in natural language and yet natural language is vague according to the algorithym.