There is no reason to believe that the human mind can solve a superset of the problems solvable by a Turing machine, and a lot of evidence to the contrary.
Also, the link you replied provides an argument of efficiency, not an argument of possibility. It is arguing that we might use things that are not Turing machines because they can solve the problem more efficiently, not because they can solve problems Turing machines could never hope to solve.
Also, the link you replied provides an argument of efficiency, not an argument of possibility. It is arguing that we might use things that are not Turing machines because they can solve the problem more efficiently, not because they can solve problems Turing machines could never hope to solve.