Fix $n^2$ indeterminates $t_1,\dots, t_{n^2}$. Let $A$ be the algebraic closure of $\mathbb C(t_1,\dots, t_{n^2})$. Consider the $n\times n$ matrix over $A$ whose entries are precisely $t_1, t_2,\dots, t_{n^2}$. Why is this diagonalizable?
I feel I am missing something obvious. My motivation for asking this question comes from a comment on this Mathoverflow answer, which gives a slick proof of the Cayley-Hamilton theorem. I will try to fill in the details; please alert me if there is a gap. If we know this is true, then since the Cayley-Hamilton theorem is easy to verify for diagonalizable operators, we know the matrix $M$ above annihilates its characteristic polynomial. If the characteristic polynomial over $A$ is $p(T)$, then we know that $P(M)=0$. In particular, each entry of $P(M)$ is $0$. But each entry is a polynomial in the indeterminates, which we just saw equals $0$. So no matter which values of $\mathbb C$ we put in for the $t_i$, each entry must vanish. This means every matrix over $\mathbb C$ annihilates its characteristic polynomial.
Maybe there is a more elegant way to finish; my justification seems inadequate, but I can't quite put my finger on why. I would appreciate any comments on this, too. Thank you.