There's More To Logic Than Human Logic
Logic is not limited to humans or the human brain. Logic exists anytime and anywhere a process exists.
A process is two or more steps which moves or attempts to move something from one place, state or condition to another.
Definition Of Logic
Logic is process. Logic is any process used to
manipulate and/or
discriminate. Logic is anything that describes a process such as: plan, formula, recipe, instructions, directions, steps, programs, blueprint, method, procedure, system, birth, digestion, decomposition, photosynthesis, cosmosis, comparison, breathing, walking, reading, raining, germinating, living, dying, copulating, Earth rotating, seasons changing, etc. The process can be short, long or any length in between This means all processes are examples of logic.
Logic is used to figure something out, calculate something, compute something, understand something, accomplish something, convert something or transform something. Most of this is the kind of logic we are used to thinking about as logic; however, every thought, every decision, every action, every behavior and every motion are examples of logic.
Logic uses information from all the senses, the body, the brain, the spirit, the emotions, within the person, outside the person, outside Earth, what's visible and what's not.
Logic does not imply something is right or wrong or makes sense or no sense. Logic is simply the process that moves something from A to B or attempts to do so.
Reasoning To Logical Conclusions
Although logic includes the process of human thinking, it is much simpler than that - it is process. Logic is more widespread than human logic because it is in use throughout creation. Because of its simplicity and its ubiquity, logic is much more complex than human thinking ever could be.