^ If this is true then can truth go beyond human logic?
This is something I like. Therefore logic must be limited.Not only that, but true/false, and even the concept of things having a single place on a scale, may not even exist in the way we conceive of it. It may very well be that every possible reality and every possible course of events in all those realities, already exist and are all somehow intertwined yet separate.
In other words, it's possible that the nature of reality actually contradicts itself and is paradoxical, but that we can't understand the aspects of it that are like this well enough to manipulate them or interact with them because of the way our minds work.
Animal logic works just like ours, their capacity for it is just smaller (as far as we know). It goes back to learning principles.
No, no. Animals have EMOTIONS and INSTINCTS, and they feel pain, but they don't have LOGIC. Logic came when we evolved a neocortex. No animal besides an ape has even a simpler version of logic.
Ok..either our definition of logic is different, or we disagree. What I mean is, an animal has the capacity to see that a+b=c. Aka, there's food on the table, getting the food is self-rewarding, but the owner is in the room which= punishment. So the animal waits till the owner is gone to get the food and thus having its cake(or meat) and eat it. It's called operant conditioning.
Other examples are for instance when researchers present the animal with a puzzle or riddle to get to a food reward they really like. They may not be as good at it as we are, but up to a certain level, they figure it out, and often they surprise us with their ingenuity.
^ Yea, I know, but is it limited?
Is that limited too?Limited by the person's capability to meaningfully categorize, at least.
Can truth go beyond human logic?
Yes.
God.
Thats right I said it.