Is there an axiom for everything?
Abstract
We first start by clarifying what axiomatizing everything can mean. We then study
a famous case of axiomatization, the axiomatization of natural numbers, where two
different aspects of axiomatization show up, the model-theoretical one and the proof-theoretical one. After that we discuss a case of axiomatization in a sense opposed to
the one of arithmetic, the axiomatization of the notion of order, where the idea is not
to catch a specific structure, but a notion. A third mathematical case is then examined,
the one of identity, a simple and obvious notion, but that cannot be axiomatized in
first-order logic. We then move on to more general notions: the axiomatization of
causality and the universe. To end with we deal with an even more tricky question:
the axiomatization of reasoning itself. In conclusion we discuss in the light of our
investigations the relation between axiomatization and understanding.