In 1942, Kurt Godel, the Austrian born logician who brought formalized mathematics to its knees with his celebrated Incompleteness Theorem, traveled from Princeton to Trenton, N.J., with Albert Einstein to become a naturalized American citizen.
(The Incompleteness Theorem, published in 1931, proves that a mathematical system based upon a finite set of logically consistent axioms is necessarily incomplete.)
Godel, called the greatest logician since Aristotle, informed the dumbfounded judge at his naturalization hearing that he saw a fatal flaw in the United States Constitution: the presidency could become a dictatorship. Needless to say, Einstein was horrified by his colleague’s faux pas. The judge, however, demurred and Godel became an American citizen.
Sixty-four years later, Godel’s faux pas doesn’t seem like such a faux pas after all.
David N. Houghtaling
Everett
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