H
Hastrman
Guest
As indicated above, I see mathematics primarily as a system of formal logic. Of course, in the light of Godel’s Incompleteness Theorem, that means that there must be some propositions in mathematics which are neither true nor false, given my way of looking at things.
You think that’s what Goedel Incompleteness means, and you call yourself a mathematician?
Goedel Incompleteness states that any consistent group of axioms will contain axioms that cannot be proven within that group of axioms–proving them will require reference to other information. That does not mean that those axioms are neither true nor false–it *might *, sometimes, mean they’re not provable, but that’s not the same thing at all.
Basically you’ve commited this all-too-common fallacy:
And with arguments of this caliber does it ask me to deny my God?Not provable=neither true nor false