User:Alan Lindberg/sandbox

I have a question please, When Kurt Godel put forth his incompleteness theorem, was he saying that "Without a limit, all systems end in conflict?", please excuse the simplicity of my paraphrasing I have little formal math training but have been interested in Godel's theorems ever since I was introduced to them. Most of the nomenclature of math escapes me, it's uses tantalizing it's promises are intoxicating, but Godel came along and upended most of what we understand as the foundations of our math systems. His incompleteness theorem very formally and very thoroughly showing us that without what I would label -limits- all systems will find, somewhere in them conflicting results. If true then it falls to our species to predict and avoid such results, so far as we understand in our system we, "humanity" are the limit to a very robust very fragile system. If this is the case it falls to us to establish limits that will avoid all of our conflicts. Humanities continued existence is the limit to a system that we so very much cherish ourselves. All means of continuing, improving, and preserving humanity must without hesitation be employed. Everything depends upon it.

Thank you for giving my question any consideration.

Alan C. Lindberg