Yes, of course the set of all possible sentences is complete and inconsistent.
GOTO 3316 and don't come out of the loop until you understand that.
Or, possibly, are you trying to construct a set of all the statements that are neither provable nor disprovable in ZFC? Good luck with that since it is not a set in ZFC.
Or,...
Care to provide some clarity?
As jsfisher suggested, let's focused on the, so called, difference between cardinal and ordinal numbers.
All
G additional statements are encoded by Gödel numbers, where (if I am not wrong) using all the natural numbers is enough in order to encode every possible
G type statement.
In order to first clearly see that there is bijection between all the natural numbers and some collection of
Gs type, we are using an ordered mapping, for example:
1 --> G
1
2 --> G
2
3 --> G
3
4 --> G
4
5 --> G
5
6 --> G
6
...
At this stage order is important, so the mapping is done among the terms of two sequences and
not among two sets, since order is insignificant in case of sets.
After using order, we can get rid of it and remain only with the bijective map and the cardinality (the size) that is involved with it (now we deduce in terms of bijection among two sets).
Let (G
1, G'
1, G
2, G'
2, G
3, G'
3, ...) be a sequence of
G type statements.
By not ignoring order (at least at the first glance) we have bijection among the terms of the two following sequences:
1 --> G
1
2 --> G'
1
3 --> G
2
4 --> G'
2
5 --> G
3
6 --> G'
3
...
By ignoring order we remain only with the bijective map and the cardinality (the size) that is involved with it (now we deduce in terms of bijection among two sets).
The cardinality of the two considered bijective maps is the same, but the output side of the second bijective map is involved also with G'
n statements, which are not found in the first bijective map.
By following this reasoning, one may conclude that by using order in the first glance, new
Gs type are always added even if the cardinality remains the same.
--------------------
But is this conclusion logically valid? Let's carefully check it.
Since cardinality remains the same in both bijections, we must not take the two considered cases as two different cases.
On the contrary, the identity between the cardinalities is used like symmetry under addition, and by using the notion of actual infinity in terms of Platonic realm, nothing is actually added in the output side of the bijective maps, since in a Platonic realm all possible
Gs are
already outputs of all the natural numbers.
So every mathematician that agrees with the notion of completed infinite sets/sequences in terms of Platonic realm (at least as I understand it)
must agree that by using ZF(C) Axiom Of Infinity in order to establish the natural numbers and the infinite axiom set A (where A is established by using ZF(C) Axiom Of Infinity on ZF(C) itself) no possible
G type statement is left out.
As a result, A must be complete and therefore inconsistent, according to Gödel's First Incompleteness Theorem.