I think the premise of the work is silly. I knew Gödel personally and many people who knew him. My long-time friend Robin Gandy was a close friend and associate of Turing. I think it is true that Godel was very frustrated by not being able to settle the status of the Continuum Hypothesis, but to say that his mathematics drove him mad is terrible pop psychology. In the case of Turing, the matter is even less clear. For him, persecution may have been a big factor in his suicide -- which also could have been an accident. Gödel did suffer from paranoia, and Cantor was oppressed by religious questions, which he did relate to his theories of the infinite. But to conclude cause and effect seems pretty hard to prove. And what is the point? [For admin and other information see: http://www.mta.ca/~cat-dist/ ]