David, I thank you for reading my essay. Your comments are cogent and help me immensely. In regards to mathematics, I will blame my lack of writing skills for not making myself clear. I was trying to say mathematics (mostly geometry) needs to be reformulated away from the central idea of a dimensionless point. I am not against mathematics as a whole.
You insight on the potential use of Godel's theorem to show a relationship to human insanity was humorous and good.
My understanding is that indeterminateness and undecidability are related. The question is how. For my model, both are a function of two, temporal time zones. In other words, their relationship and cause (so-to-speak) is due to human limitations in being able to measure the future, even though we live in the future as well as the past. We can only measure the past.
As for the use of Godel's incompleteness theorem and its relationship to the wave-function, the best I can say is that the wave-function, as a mathematical expression, is built upon axioms that prevent it from securing an ontological character. If the axioms were changed and mathematics reformulated, then an ontologically relevant wave-function could be developed.
In regards to mathematicians and physicists critiquing their own disciplines, I agree. But critique that does not change outcomes is probably not a deep enough critique.