There is a limit to what can be understood by our human minds. It is arrogance to assume that we are somehow the frontier and limitation of what intelligence is.
It is far likely that we are the fish in the koi pond. Absolute in our belief that there is no up or down, only forward, backwards and sideways.
So many weird things that we see in our dimension that doesn't make sense. Imagine if you picked up a fish and dropped it behind another fish. It is pure magic, teleporation, act of god to the occupants of the koi pond. It would never understand what is outside the pond and why.
Simlarily, it is the common belief that we humans are also those fish in the koi ponds, desperate to explain away and make sense of the unknowable.
Whatever limits we have as individuals are generally invisible to us. It’s fairly easy for us to see those limits in other humans. By extension I have no doubt other humans can see limits in my range of thoughts, and I expect there to be thoughts that no human is able to think.
I don't think worrying about limits is a good thing for us as individuals or as a species. Sure some things are harder to comprehend, but we haven't come across anything incomprehensible yet, let's cross that bridge when we get there.
Usually when I see "limits" in other people it's not so much that they can't possibly comprehend something, it's that it would take an impractical amount of effort and time to have them comprehend it. With better teaching technology it may be more feasible for them to understand these things that were incomprehensible to them, and if not there's always the next generation.
It is far likely that we are the fish in the koi pond. Absolute in our belief that there is no up or down, only forward, backwards and sideways.
So many weird things that we see in our dimension that doesn't make sense. Imagine if you picked up a fish and dropped it behind another fish. It is pure magic, teleporation, act of god to the occupants of the koi pond. It would never understand what is outside the pond and why.
Simlarily, it is the common belief that we humans are also those fish in the koi ponds, desperate to explain away and make sense of the unknowable.