Now that you, dear reader!, have worked your way through this difficult book, and some of you have probably worked your way through all three of my Springer volumes, I would like to state my conclusions, my views, much more emphatically. I would like to summarize as forcefully as possible my new viewpoint. These three books are my justification for these strong claims! I'll make my polemical points in haphazard order:
It is in the field of epistemology and in metamathematics, that AIT makes a fundamentally new contribution. K. did not realize how revolutionary AIT is, that AIT states that some mathematical truths are fundamentally probabilistic, that there is randomness in the foundations of mathematics, that the truth content of some statements in pure mathematics is grey, not black or white, that sometimes truth is probabilistic, not sharp and clear. And that this occurs even in the world of pure mathematics, not just in empirical sciences like physics.
AIT has shown that randomness arises in the very heart of pure mathematics, and is the real reason behind Gödel incompleteness and Turing uncomputability. According to AIT, probability theory is no longer a branch of applied math, in which probabilities come only from physics. AIT shows that probabilities and randomness arise naturally in pure mathematics. Ω demonstrates this, and the diophantine equation for Ω demonstrates a much more devastating kind of randomness in number theory than was envisioned in any of the work on probabilistic number theory.
You have to imagine the possibility of success before you can achieve it. You have to dream of a more beautiful new viewpoint before you can confirm it! You have to want to understand with all your soul, you have to be obsessed with that! A lifetime is barely enough time to begin to make a dent in any significant problem. You have to want to more than anything!
Without a passion for understanding, without impatience with received majority views, it's completely hopeless. Chance favors a prepared mind! Major new ideas do not simply drop onto the lap of scientists, it takes years of work and dreams for that to happen. It just looks like chance when it finally happens! And you forget the years of study and toil that prepared for that magical moment of enlightenment.
Be prepared to have many false breakthroughs, which don't survive the glaring light of rational scrutiny the next morning. You have to dare to imagine many false beautiful theories before you can hit on one that works; be daring, dare to dream, have faith in the power of new ideas and hard work.
(Signed)
Gregory Chaitin
September 2000