Baba Bozo does such things as this frequently. It is his way of spreading Bozoism, the next great world religion.You're doing it again, Baba Bozo.
Ok, yes, makes sense, agreed.Probably the most important question in philosophy is 'What do you mean?' It is fundamentally what the Socratic method tries to establish; a side effect is that it sometimes uncovers the fact that people are either not clear, or have no idea what they are talking about.
Well, I've said a good bit already. Specific questions from you might help clarify what part has worked, and what part didn't. Or, a lack of such questions might reveal that you aren't actually all that interested. Either way is ok, but if it's clarity you want, there's some for you.Your basic premise is that 'thought is limited'. So: what do you mean?
That's not really a limitation, as the brain has invented computers to take on the additional calculations.Two alternatives spring to mind: the first is the trivially true observation that, as a physical apparatus, the human brain can only perform a limited, albeit impressive number of functions at any one time.
Even if humans can think about anything and everything in all of reality, it is still thinking that we are doing. Thus, whatever the biases, distortions and limitations of thought might be, they would apply to anything we think about.The second option is that the human brain is limited in what it can think about. For all we know, that is true, but in order to prove it, we would have to demonstrate that there are things we can't think about, but do so without thinking about them.
Please note that my post was about thought specifically, not the human brain generally. Thought ≠ Brain.
Let's consider a specific example to make this sound less esoteric.
Consider the human eye. The eye can is very useful, but it can perceive only a limited fragment of the electromagnetic spectrum. As the eye evolved, human beings had no pressing reason to perceive gamma rays, so that feature is not built in to the human eye. The eye is useful, but limited.
Thought is just another mechanical process of the human body. Like the eye, it evolved in response to a specific environment. Like the eye and everything else in the human body, thought is useful, but limited.
Science is limited because the medium in which science takes place, the medium that science is made of, is itself limited.