"The remarkable theorem of incompleteness uncovered an unbridgeable gap in all attempts to systematize mathematical reasoning, a result that appears almost paradoxical." "The genius behind this discovery was Kurt Godel, himself a man of paradox. He was the greatest logician since Aristotle, as well as Einstein's closest intellectual companion during Einstein's last years. But he was also deeply eccentric and given to paranoiac deductions that ultimately led to his tragic death. Subject to irrationality, he nevertheless put his faith in reason. With the use of an ingenious proof he was able to demonstrate that in any sufficiently complex system - in short, any system a mathematician would want to use - there are true statements that cannot be proven. Some thinkers despaired at this result. Others, like the formidable Wittgenstein, could never accept it. And still others misunderstood it as a torpedo to the hull of rationality itself. For Godel, however, it was evidence of an eternal, objective truth, independent of human thought, that can only be apprehended imperfectly by the human mind."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved
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