J03bot said:
Logic is a product of the sentient mind - in a hypothetical universe with no life, no such sentience exists.
I contest this.
Let us begin: what is logic?
I propose we use the following definition: "the quality of being justifiable by reason."
Do you accept this definition as a starting point?
Also:
Ergo, logic can be disproved in that universe, but only using the thought processes of another universe entirely.
This would still require that the thinking entity, and thus the disproof, be done in a universe where logic exists even by your own admission.
Thereby, limiting the disproof to not using logic during it, or adding the qualifier
"In a universe without logic, the rules of logic do not apply", which itself is a practice of logic.
Therefore, the entity cannot disprove logic, without ending in a self-referencing argument, no matter if a universe void of logic did exist somewhere.
And since you seemed to hold that logic is the product of a sentient mind, would it therefore not follow that as soon as this hypothetical entity enters the hypothetical universe where no logic used to exist, he 'brings' it with his own thoughts and mind. Thereby, making it impossible to excercise a disproval of logic within a universe that contains no logic.
"that there isn't some other universe that has entities with some inconceivable (to us) thought processes that are capable of entirely disproving logic without actually engaging in logic?"
Because the connectivity of thought to concept, or proof or argument to concept itself requires logic by its very nature. To claim otherwise, is to contest the very concept of thought.
And if it is sufficiently different from thought, is it thought any longer?
Everything is what it is, and cannot be what it is not.
Your argument is limited by the fact that it relies on the human mind and upon language
No, but rather relies upon concepts. I am merely using language to communicate those concepts to you.
these impossible, imaginary things have their own impossibilities, and our minds can't begin to understand what they are.
And yet, if they have thought, they apply logic. Because thought is a consistent, logical link between a concept they are thinking off, and whatever passes as language for them.