Steven - A brilliant essay, thank you. Remarkably, it seems designed to answer some questions Marc Seguin and I were just asking about in the essay that appears just prior to yours in the competition. That is so curious...
I was speculating, in response to Mark's essay, on the fact that you can respond to a Godellian truth - the ones that cannot be proved - by adding it as an axiom and getting to a higher level mathematical theory. Or you could add it's negation as an axiom, which would then split the Mathematical universe in two, just as the physical universe gets split in two when a superposition collapses. So at the fifth postulate in geometry, mathematics splits into Euclidean or Reimmanian space.
But Godel's problem is tied to the self-referential nature of mathematics, and as you point out, that seems to resolve if you do the self-referencing twice... Beautiful!
In your conclusion #2, you note that physical reality can not be entirely reduced as "there will never be one measurement paradigm that can be used to explain everything else."
Would you agree as well that mathematics can never be reduced as there is never one formulation that will ever explain everything - no universal set of axioms (finite or infinite) that can produce all the answers. And,of course, if you open the door to the MUH with the ultimate "no axioms" (infinite degrees of freedom) you also get no answers.
Your conclusion #4 introduces consciousness, causality, non locality and self-awareness. That's a lot to cover in one paragraph and I'm not sure I follow your leaps. But would you agree that these concepts will share in the indeterminacy you describe for math and physics?
That would suggest - no TOE?
I would be delighted if you have a chance to read my essay "The Hole at the Center of Creation."
Many thanks! - George Gantz