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Axioms and Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem

Source: MIT 6.1200J Lecture 01

Axiom

Definition: A proposition that is assumed to be True.

Key Insight

  • You MUST make assumptions in mathematics
  • The key is to state them upfront

Examples of Contradictory Axiom Systems

All three are equally valid — they define different geometric worlds:

  1. Euclidean: Given line l and point p ∉ l, exactly one line through p parallel to l
  2. Hyperbolic: Given line l and point p ∉ l, infinitely many lines through p parallel to l
  3. Spherical: Given line l and point p ∉ l, no line through p parallel to l

Lesson: Different axioms yield different proofs and theorems. Anyone who accepts your axioms must accept theorems derived from them.

Consistency and Completeness

Consistent

Definition: A set of axioms is consistent if no proposition can be both proved and disproved.

Complete

Definition: A set of axioms is complete if every proposition can be either proved or disproved.

Ideal scenario: Both consistent AND complete.

Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem

Theorem (Kurt Gödel, 1930s): No set of axioms is both complete and consistent.

Impact

  • Shocked the mathematical community
  • Logicians Russell and Whitehead spent careers trying to find complete + consistent axioms for arithmetic — impossible!

Corollary

If axioms must be consistent (necessary for validity), then there exist True statements that cannot be proved.

Example

  • Goldbach's Conjecture might be true but unprovable
  • (If so, please don't assign it as homework!)