Logic, law, and word are nearly the same in the root. Logos, legis. All of these apparently are from the Indo-European lex-, to gather. We're gathering. There is no limit except our ability to learn and gather; mende- learn, mathematikos, learning. It's what we do, we are men, women, learners, gatherers.
It seems to be what separates us from other animals, doesn't it?
Remember the old ditty:
Fish gotta swim;
Bird gotta fly;
Man gotta sit,
and ask himself "why, why, why."
Logic and reason is one of the ways we ask why, applicable only to those things that can be answered, "because "
In other words, it applies only to causal, conditional knowing. But, man has never limited himself to this, and long ago found that, in a true learning quest, logic becomes a long string of becauses, ending only with something taken as a given, an axiom, or "self-evident." I.e. something not known using the tool of logic (less we wish to add another because, another link in an endless chain and face the same logical wall a step further away.)
Here we see the limit of logic as a tool, not to be confused with "our limit of our ability ot learn, to gather "
Once we have that axiom, that non-proven self-evident beginning, logic is a marvelous tool for so much more knowing and acting. But to act at all, we must start with something logic cannot be used to teach us.
Thanks for your reply.