Humans emulate (or simulate) logic, but it's not our natural state.
Computers are perfect logicians by default, but AFAIK no logic compact enough to be human-comprehensible has been enough to see, hear, or read. At least, not reliably so.
Logic gates are combined to form binary numbers, which are used to label symbols and approximate reals, upon which calculus is approximated in toy models of neurons, which are combined and trained and eventually learn to add numbers and then puts the wrong number of hands onto the third arm of the human it was tasked with drawing.
Computers are perfect logicians by default, but AFAIK no logic compact enough to be human-comprehensible has been enough to see, hear, or read. At least, not reliably so.
Logic gates are combined to form binary numbers, which are used to label symbols and approximate reals, upon which calculus is approximated in toy models of neurons, which are combined and trained and eventually learn to add numbers and then puts the wrong number of hands onto the third arm of the human it was tasked with drawing.