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David C. Ullrich
ullrich at math.okstate.edu
Mon Jun 4 10:08:02 EDT 2001
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Mon Jun 4 10:08:02 EDT 2001
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On Sun, 3 Jun 2001 19:49:08 +0200, "Alex Martelli" <aleaxit at yahoo.com> wrote: >"David C. Ullrich" <ullrich at math.okstate.edu> wrote in message >news:3b1a4ce6.577431 at nntp.sprynet.com... > ... >> a place where I was asked for a definition >> and didn't give said definition I'll say oops, >> never mind excuse me. But I don't believe that >> that has happened. Accusing me of refusing to >> supply definitions when asked is egregiously >> insulting. > >Reading back on the thread I saw I did not directly >ask you for the definition, just indicated that the >definition you (and/or Von Neumann) were using >was not clear by such "hints" as: >""" >If by "perfect" randomness VN meant an infinite amount >thereof (by Chaitin measure), he might have said that >""" > >But then I never accused you of not giving the >definition when directly asked to give it -- show >me a place where I said that? Here's a quote from a post a few messages up: "As you do not deign to define your terms (not even to USE them, actually -- that 'perfect' was NOT in the original quote from JVN) unless pushed very hard about it," I suppose that is not _quite_ a direct assertion that I've been directly asked to give a definition which I then did not give, but that's certainly what the "unless pushed very hard about it" sounds like to me. >What I meant by >"not deigning" to give the definition was exactly >your failure to provide it when I was clearly saying >that I could not be sure of what the H*** you (and/or >VN) meant by that "perfect" (I believe you were >actually the one to introduce "perfect" or "true" as >adjectives qualifying "randomness"/"random" on >this thread, but I may be wrong -- I've wasted by >far enough time on this thread without going back >for a detailed exegesis of it:-). > >You did follow up to this subthread and not offered any >definition of that "perfect" (or "true") on the follow-ups, >I do believe. Am I wrong -- did I miss some message >in the huge complex of threads? This has surely been >known to happen on Usenet news at times. Whatever. For the record, although I don't quite agree that it was clear that [this] meant what you say it clearly meant, nor that it was clear that [that] meant what you say it clearly meant, you have in fact clarified what you were getting at. See, where I come from the phrase "push someone very hard for a definition" refers to something like... oh, never mind. >Alex > > > David C. Ullrich ********************* "Sometimes you can have access violations all the time and the program still works." (Michael Caracena, comp.lang.pascal.delphi.misc 5/1/01)
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