But with the rejection, in the post-Renaissance development, of formal and final causality, and with the increasing importance of efficient causation, moreover an efficient causation that bore little resemblance to Aristotle's efficient causation, the relationship between
logic (which was still largely
syllogistic) and the world had to break down.
You seem to «privilege» your sense of rationality and
logic — and cast the irrational and illogical (probably not analogical because you may incorporate analogy into your sense of «
logic» but it's illogical, descriptively) I actually see my rationality and
logic (such as it is — hardly
syllogistic) as always in the service of my attitude, outlook, frame of mind — which is to say, my illogical and irrational belief & bias system — and my unconscious, of which my consciousness is merely tip - of - the - I's berg, or as some linguists said: a snowball on the tip of the iceberg.