Followup to: What's a "natural number"?
While thinking about how to make machines understand the concept of "integers", I accidentally derived a tiny little math result that I haven't seen before. Not sure if it'll be helpful to anyone, but here goes:
You're allowed to invent an arbitrary scheme for encoding integers as strings of bits. Whatever encoding you invent, I can give you an infinite input stream of bits that will make your decoder hang and never give a definite answer like "yes, this is an integer with such-and-such value" or "no, this isn't a valid encoding of any integer".
To clarify, let's work through an example. Consider an unary encoding: 0 is 0, 1 is 10, 2 is 110, 3 is 1110, etc. In this case, if we feed the decoder an infinite sequence of 1's, it will remain forever undecided as to the integer's value. The result says we can find such pathological inputs for any other encoding system, not just unary.
The proof is obvious. (If it isn't obvious to you, work it out!) But it seems to strike at the heart of the issue why we can't naively explain to computers what a "standard integer" is, what a "terminating computation" is, etc. Namely, if you try to define an integer as some observable interface (get first bit, get last bit, get CRC, etc.), then you inevitably invite some "nonstandard integers" into your system.
This idea must be already well-known and have some standard name, any pointers would be welcome!
Encoding is not definition. While it is true that we cannot decide the integer value of "1111..." as you describe, the reason behind it is obvious: you are trying to use an inductive algorithm on a co-inductive data structure.
Clearly, your proposed bits-to-ints encoding scheme is isomorphic to lists of unit, and it so happens that there is a one-to-one mapping between list-of-unit and inductively defined natural numbers, exactly so long as the lists in question are inductive and thefore finite. This isomorphism is made up of
length :: list unit -> int
andrepeat unit :: int -> list unit
, according to their usual definition. Proof of that this is isomorphic is left as an exercise to the reader.