EDIT: Shaddy came up with a very interesting point! My gut feeling is still protesting, but I'll have to sleep on it before I'll say anything more here
.@Redundant: OK, you just (I think) proved that the equivalence relation is well-defined when applied to a finite number of sets. Whether or not this automatically implies that the collection of equivalence classes forms a
discrete basis set for all the infinite sequences of ones and zeroes is beyond me.
More importantly though, you did not really address my argument, which is pertinently NOT one of computability. I have stated many times that I am willing to accept infinite memory and runtimes. However, I will, yet again, repeat my problem, which you did NOT address:
Myself wrote:You cannot say: "despite the fact that you can obviously never calculate for all elements, our solution algorithm is valid; but your algorithm is not valid because you can never calculate for all elements."
I have provided an algorithm that, provided infinite runtimes are available, will give an inconsistency in your model. I would love to hear why this does not actually break your logic; unfortunately, it seems that no one here has a deep enough understanding of the math to explain this. That's fine, neither do I, but please either address this issue or admit that you don't know the answer!
My name is Gijs, from Utrecht, NL.
When in doubt, play the most aggressive move