meh. Yes, that is of course possible in the strictest sense - but too vague and too far fetched to be worthy of discussion.
Vague in so far as saying we don't know what we don't know. I've no idea how to judge just how far fetched the idea is. Since we're creatures adapted to survive in the environment we evolved in, I'm not sure it seems so implausible myself.
Not being aware of something isn't the same thing as being incapable of understanding it.
No, but I suspect not understanding something might make you unaware of something, or at least many aspects of that thing.
Again, you are using a concept that we cannot talk about *by definition*.
Sure. We can't talk really talk about some imagined thing that we wouldn't understand with any authority whatsoever. That doesn't mean to say we can't discuss the concept that such things might exist. In fact that's exactly what we are doing.
The same thing gets trotted out a lot when it comes to humans vs. god when the usual analogy is that it would be similar to ants vs. humans. There it will be pointed out that we couldn't understand god the same way ants couldn't understand humans.
The problem there is that ants don't understand *anything*. They lack the ability for "understanding". We don't. It's a qualitative difference, not a quantitative one.
I agree that it's a flawed analogy for the reason you suggest. However, I don't think the idea behind the analogy is entirely without merit in this instance.
If perhaps we used a dog as an example. My dog is pretty bright as dogs go. He can distinguish between various toys, respond to dozens of commands and reacts to cues I don't even know I'm giving. He's never going to understand the concepts involved in computer programming though.
So perhaps there are concepts which we would only come to grips with if we studied for 200 years or if our intelligence was significantly improved.
There's still a qualitative difference involved in the analogy, but who's to say there might not be a further qualitative difference involved in an alien intelligence? Some inter-dimensional beings or even some other concept of life and intelligence which our imaginations haven't considered yet that allow for an understanding of the universe on a level we're incapable of.
Anyway, this is drifting away from the original point in the thread. My point was really in exploring definitions of "magic". My thinking is that something using some kind of technology beyond our understanding might not be merely indistinguishable from magic, but by some definitions, might actually
be magic.