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The Limits of Knowledge– I can’t imagine what I can’t imagine.

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We often hear thee phrase, “You don’t know what you don’t know.”

It implies that the unknown merely awaits discovery. But the deeper limitation may not be ignorance; it may be imagination. I can’t imagine what I can’t imagine.

Every thought I have, every analogy I construct, every scientific theory I devise is built from narrow tiny range of stimuli that evolution has allowed me to perceive. There may exist entire categories of reality for which I possess no sensory foundation, no language, no mathematics, and no intuition.

The greatest mysteries of the universe may not be the questions we cannot answer. They may be the questions we never can think to ask.


Are there things that literally are unimaginable — things we never will know because they are well outside our senses?

Science is often portrayed as an endless expansion of knowledge, but perhaps our greatest limitation is not ignorance. Perhaps it is imagination. We assume that if something exists, eventually we will discover it. Yet every discovery we have ever made has been filtered through the narrow range of stimuli our senses can detect.

We build telescopes, microscopes, radio receivers, and gravitational-wave detectors, but all they really do is translate unfamiliar phenomena into sights, sounds, numbers, and images that our human brains already know how to interpret. We extend our senses, but we do not fundamentally change them.

Learning itself depends upon analogy. To understand something new, we compare it with something already familiar. Every explanation eventually comes down to the phrase, “It is like…”

That simple phrase reveals the profound limitation of human thought. If a phenomenon is unlike anything we have ever experienced, then we cannot truly imagine it. We can assign it a name, measure its effects, and manipulate equations describing its behavior, but we cannot picture it.

Ultraviolet light is a perfect example. We know its wavelength, we know that bees see it, and we know that flowers display intricate ultraviolet patterns invisible to us. Yet no human has ever experienced what ultraviolet “looks like.” We possess the mathematics, but not the sensation.

Many insects, birds, fish, and even reindeer can see ultraviolet light. We can imagine red and blue, but we cannot imagine ultraviolet. We cannot imagine what gravity looks like. Or magnetism. We cannot comprehend a singularity that supposedly lies at the center of a black hole. We cannot visualize a fourth physical dimension.

Quantum mechanics illustrates this limitation perfectly. We speak confidently of particles, waves, fields, and entanglement, yet these words are merely placeholders.

A quantum “particle” is not truly like a tiny billiard ball, a quantum “field” is not a field in the ordinary sense, and “entanglement” is simply a label attached to a mathematical relationship that defies ordinary intuition.

These all are just the stimuli that we know exist, but we can’t imagine them. There may be infinite potential stimuli in the universe a that are completely beyond our imagination–literally unimaginable. Our ability to imagine may be “like” the skin of an apple compared to what the universe holds.

We invent words because our language has reached its limits. The names do not explain the phenomena; they merely remind us that something exists beyond our imagination.

Perhaps mathematics is our greatest attempt to escape these biological constraints. It allows us to reason about realities that no human being can visualize.

Yet mathematics, too, is a human invention, constructed by human minds from human patterns of thought. It succeeds brilliantly, but it reaches boundaries.

At the singularities predicted by general relativity and in the earliest moments of the Big Bang and inside a black hole, our mathematics ceases to provide meaningful descriptions. Our final refuge becomes silent.

Imagine that the universe contains a mile-wide spectrum of possible stimuli, while human beings can detect only a one-inch strip. Every philosophy, every science, every religion, every work of art, and every mathematical system must necessarily arise from that tiny strip.

We naturally ask, “What don’t we know?” The deeper question is, “What are we incapable of even imagining?” Somewhere beyond our narrow sensory window may exist entirely different categories of experience for which human senses, language, mathematics, and intuition have no counterpart.

One day we may discover that the next great scientific revolution will not come from a larger telescope or a more powerful accelerator. It may come from acquiring an entirely new sense.

Imagine a human endowed with the ultraviolet vision of a bird, the magnetic sensitivity of a migratory animal, or some completely novel form of perception unknown on Earth.

Such a person would not merely gather more information. They would possess new analogies, new intuitions, and perhaps entirely new mathematics. Concepts that now appear mysterious—perhaps even quantum entanglement itself—might become as self-evident as color or sound is to us.

Our greatest obstacle to understanding the universe may not be that reality is too complex. It may be that evolution equipped us to survive rather than to comprehend.

The human mind is a magnificent instrument, but like every instrument, it has a range. Beyond that range lies not merely the unknown, but perhaps the unimaginable. Every discovery we make is limited not only by the instruments we build but by the kinds of experience our brains are capable of having. 

A man explaining quantum chromodynamics to a dog
Why can’t you understand?

Usually, I propose a specific idea—Monetary Sovereignty, consciousness as responsiveness, locality as relationship. Here, I identify a limit: not a limit of physics, but a limit of human cognition itself.

Whether the conclusion ultimately proves right or wrong, I think it is an important philosophical question. Are there things we simply cannot know, because evolution wired our brains to survive, not to know the universe.

Try to explain atoms to a dog. Its brain is not constructed to understand atoms. Why should we humans believe that our brain is constructed to know everything? Why should there not be an intelligence as far above us as we are above a dog?

We flatter ourselves by believing that science is a steady march toward complete understanding. Perhaps it is a steady march toward the limits of human imagination. Beyond those limits may lie realities that are not merely undiscovered but literally inconceivable to the human brain.

Evolution has not ended here. It continues. There is no reason why evolution should have equipped today’s Homo Sapiens to imagine everything. We surely are just another interim in the long chain of evolution — which may even include forms of machine intelligence — and not the ultimate rung of comprehension.

Perhaps there are aspects of reality — stimuli that surround us every moment — as obvious to other forms of intelligence as color is to us, yet forever inaccessible because the necessary senses, analogies, and concepts do not exist within us of today.

We do not know what they are. More profoundly, we cannot imagine what they could be.

But tomorrow’s great grandchildren might.

Rodger Malcolm  Mitchell


Source: https://mythfighter.com/2026/07/10/the-limits-of-knowledge-i-cant-imagine-what-i-cant-imagine/


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