ChatGPT: Godel implicitly rejects LEM with his Godel sentence
Gödel’s work does not implicitly reject the Law of the Excluded Middle (LEM) with his Gödel sentence, though the situation is subtle and depends on context.
Let’s unpack this:

LEM (Law of the Excluded Middle)
LEM is the classical logical principle that every proposition P is either true or false:
P∨¬P

What is the Gödel Sentence?
Gödel constructs a sentence G in arithmetic such that (in a system like Peano Arithmetic, PA):
G↔¬Prov(⌜G⌝)
This says: “G is not provable.”
Gödel showed that if PA is consistent, then:
G is not provable in PA
But G is true in the standard model of arithmetic

Does this contradict LEM?
In classical logic (which Gödel uses), LEM holds. Even if we can’t prove G or ¬G, either G is true or ¬G is true. This is exactly what classical logic asserts. Gödel's reasoning relies on classical logic, especially for meta-mathematical arguments. So Gödel does not reject LEM — he assumes it in both the construction and the meta-theoretical reasoning.

Why the Confusion? Constructivist View
In constructive logic, where LEM is not accepted by default, Gödel’s sentence is troubling:
We can’t prove G, nor ¬G
So in constructivist logic, we might withhold judgment on G∨¬G
This suggests that constructivists may see the Gödel sentence as evidence against using LEM in all cases
But Gödel himself was not a constructivist — in fact, he was skeptical of intuitionism and defended classical reasoning.

Summary
Gödel does not reject LEM. His incompleteness theorems are fully classical.
The Gödel sentence G is undecidable in the system, but it does not imply that G∨¬G fails.
Constructivists might use the Gödel sentence to motivate skepticism toward LEM, but Gödel himself did not.