YES

We show the termination of the TRS R:

  f(x) -> s(x)
  f(s(s(x))) -> s(f(f(x)))

-- SCC decomposition.

Consider the dependency pair problem (P, R), where P consists of

p1: f#(s(s(x))) -> f#(f(x))
p2: f#(s(s(x))) -> f#(x)

and R consists of:

r1: f(x) -> s(x)
r2: f(s(s(x))) -> s(f(f(x)))

The estimated dependency graph contains the following SCCs:

  {p1, p2}


-- Reduction pair.

Consider the dependency pair problem (P, R), where P consists of

p1: f#(s(s(x))) -> f#(f(x))
p2: f#(s(s(x))) -> f#(x)

and R consists of:

r1: f(x) -> s(x)
r2: f(s(s(x))) -> s(f(f(x)))

The set of usable rules consists of

  r1, r2

Take the reduction pair:

  lexicographic combination of reduction pairs:
  
    1. matrix interpretations:
    
      carrier: N^2
      order: standard order
      interpretations:
        f#_A(x1) = ((1,1),(0,0)) x1
        s_A(x1) = ((0,0),(1,1)) x1 + (1,1)
        f_A(x1) = ((0,0),(1,1)) x1 + (1,1)
    
    2. matrix interpretations:
    
      carrier: N^2
      order: standard order
      interpretations:
        f#_A(x1) = x1
        s_A(x1) = (1,1)
        f_A(x1) = (2,2)
    
    3. matrix interpretations:
    
      carrier: N^2
      order: standard order
      interpretations:
        f#_A(x1) = (0,0)
        s_A(x1) = (1,1)
        f_A(x1) = (2,1)
    

The next rules are strictly ordered:

  p1, p2

We remove them from the problem.  Then no dependency pair remains.