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- Xref: sparky comp.ai.philosophy:6838 sci.logic:2095
- Path: sparky!uunet!comp.vuw.ac.nz!waikato.ac.nz!aukuni.ac.nz!kcbbs!nacjack!codewks!system
- Newsgroups: comp.ai.philosophy,sci.logic
- Subject: Re: Self-Reference and Paradox (was Re: Human intelligence...)
- Message-ID: <62JeuB2w165w@CODEWKS.nacjack.gen.nz>
- From: system@CODEWKS.nacjack.gen.nz (Wayne McDougall)
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 92 09:26:04 NZST
- References: <1992Nov15.060331.3162@CSD-NewsHost.Stanford.EDU>
- Organization: The Code Works Limited, PO Box 10 155, Auckland, New Zealand
- Lines: 24
-
- pratt@Sunburn.Stanford.EDU (Vaughan R. Pratt) writes:
-
- > In article <1992Nov14.151559.13227@oracorp.com> daryl@oracorp.com (Daryl McCu
- >
- > The simplest instance of the proposal arises when one asks why the
- > universe does not blink out when the output of an inverter is connected
- > back to its input. The answer, at least for those inverters that come
- > in little plastic sixpacks with 14 pins, is that their inputs and
- > outputs quickly reach a compromise in the neighborhood of 2.5 volts
- > before the big bang has had much of a chance to get under way. Any
- > explanation of this behavior must clearly go beyond just the two truth
- > values 0 volts and 5 volts appearing in the explanation of the normal
- > behavior of inverters.
- >
- I don't know about the Big Bang, but has anyone else heard of
- the apocryphal story of an early computer avec valves et al, which was
- inadvertently given a similar problem, and almost shook itself to death
- as it oscillated from true to false.
-
- --
- Wayne McDougall, BCNU
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