Jul 15, 2023 12:20
Looking at your answer - I think my beef is that there is no "portable program" here. There is just the occurs check, and no program.
Jul 15, 2023 12:01
I agree that the correct "answer" is to abort calculation. But I don't agree that your over-simplified Prolog phrase manages to encode the paradox in a meaningful way. The best that you are showing is that Prolog can recognize a circular term - which we already know.
Jul 14, 2023 14:20
I think your argument is self-referential :-)
Jul 14, 2023 14:00
It does not prove that, because you haven't shown a success, as I keep stating. Show us how something that's not self-referencing has a different result.
Jul 14, 2023 14:00
But you're giving Prolog the cycle. You're doing 99% of the work for Prolog. Why would you think that is useful?
Jul 14, 2023 14:00
Show a similar Prolog query which succeeds. Having a query always fail is of no use. Your "encoding" is merely a pretense.
Jul 14, 2023 14:00
I know. But, you're not giving Prolog "This sentence is not true.", for Prolog to identify that there is a self-reference through some meaningful logic. You are merely providing 2 terms for which unify_with_occurs_check is going to fail. You need to have an example for which you would do this task and expect unify_with_occurs_check to succeed, where you haven't practically given Prolog the answer yourself.
Jul 14, 2023 14:00
It's not right, though. It's not recognizing "this sentence" as a self-reference. It's just doing its simple job of recognizing that the 2 terms are different yet one refers to the other.
Jul 14, 2023 14:00
Prolog doesn't hallucinate. Neural nets are not logical, i.e. they pretend to be logical via a gazillion bizarre weightings, rather than logical rules being guaranteed/dependable.
Jul 14, 2023 14:00
Might as well say that Chalk is false, therefore Cheese is false. Seems completely pointless and uninteresting. More interesting is e.g. Knights and Knaves: metalevel.at/prolog/puzzles
Jul 14, 2023 14:00
You've edited the question to include a totally wrong answer... this also returns false: unify_with_occurs_check(LP, daft(LP)).
Jul 14, 2023 14:00
Show a definition of the paradox.
 
Mar 8, 2022 15:08
person_sex(Person, Sex) :- male if not female, female if not male, or either if completely unspecified :) Cheers.
Mar 8, 2022 15:01
The thing is, this symmetry-breaking isn't necessarily a good idea. X and Y are different people, rather than interchangeable.
Mar 8, 2022 14:59
Well, usually there would be a rule to state that a person is either male or female but not both, haha.
Mar 8, 2022 14:59
More sensible-looking logic would be:
(male(X) -> true ; X <@ Y).
Mar 8, 2022 14:53
Ah. I see what you are doing, finally. Could put "male(X)" instead of "true", or add a comment to explain that code.
Mar 8, 2022 14:46
So why are you adding basically "oh just succeed anyway" to your code?
Mar 8, 2022 14:45
"; true" means succeed rather than fail.
Mar 8, 2022 14:43
One final time - WHY are you using "; true"?
Mar 8, 2022 14:41
How is "; true" sensible in a test? Why are you using it?
Mar 8, 2022 14:39
What? "; true" basically means "it's OK anyway". Why use it? Do you think you need to use it here?
Mar 8, 2022 14:37
"; true" - why would you add that? That's the broken logic.
Mar 8, 2022 14:35
Fix the code that's broken, rather than add a broken usage of "->" ;)
Mar 8, 2022 14:32
But why are you using "; true"?
Mar 8, 2022 14:29
Actually, this example is OK, to show the broken logic from "; true". That includes all of 1, 2, 3, and hence effectively removes the "A = 2" filter. So why would you want to add "; true", and how do you think it helps?
Mar 8, 2022 14:27
Ah, let me find a better example...
Mar 8, 2022 14:26
Evidence:
?- member(A, [1, 2, 3]), (A = 2 -> true).
A = 2 ;
false.
Mar 8, 2022 14:22
Your logic of:
female(Y),
( female(X)
-> X @< Y
; true
... means that female(X) does not need to be true. It will also *stop* after 1 match, rather than backtracking. Hence is broken logic.
Mar 8, 2022 14:21
This original code produces the so-called "symmetry" of X and Y swapped, for which X @> Y is an easy "symmetry-breaking" method, to prevent the "duplicate".
Mar 8, 2022 14:19
Revert back to the original code in the question, which produces:
?- halfsister(X, Y).
X = ann,
Y = sylvia ;
X = sylvia,
Y = ann ;
Mar 8, 2022 14:15
I see your point. It shows X = aaron,Y = sylvia - but not the other way around. Which means the bug is elsewhere in the code.
Mar 8, 2022 14:11
Yes. Just "X @> Y" is sufficient.
Mar 8, 2022 14:10
What do you mean by "example of no use"?
Mar 8, 2022 14:09
-> is safe for e.g. var, nonvar and ground, and with e.g. ">" mathematical arithmetic.
Mar 8, 2022 14:08
As in my "member" example from a few minutes ago. Note how "; true" effectively removes the "A > 2" filter.
Mar 8, 2022 14:07
Firstly there's absolutely no need to use -> here, and secondly it changes (i.e. breaks) the intended logic.
Mar 8, 2022 14:05
As an example (this will probably show with awful formatting) of how the "; true" alternative affects: ?- member(A, [1, 2, 3]), (A > 2 -> A > 1 ; true). A = 1 ; A = 2 ; A = 3.
Mar 8, 2022 14:05
"X @> Y" is sufficient, for symmetry-breaking. Adding -> just risks breaking soundness.
Mar 8, 2022 14:05
You're contorting the logic with "female(X) -> X @< Y; true" to become unreliable due to the "; true" alternative.
Mar 8, 2022 14:05
There is no advantage to using -> ( swi-prolog.org/pldoc/man?predicate=-%3E/2 ) here.