The corpse's brain has no electrochemical process going on, i.e. it lacks nervous activity.The corpse is a thing not a person.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon May 12, 2025 2:36 pmYes...and...?Belinda wrote: ↑Mon May 12, 2025 8:48 amA supernatural cause is above nature by definition.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun May 11, 2025 1:47 pm
No, a "miracle" would be an event with a cause, but with a supernatural one. To say, "God caused..." is not to say that something happened causelessly. That much is quite obvious, surely.
However, only in a metaphorical way can we speak of mind being a "miracle." For in a very real sense, there's nothing at all unusual about "mind." As hard as the concept may be for us to fully comprehend, we all do comprehend it on an experiential level: we all both have and use minds constantly. Ironically, to deny the existence of mind requires an exercise of mind.
So even a Determinist cannot deny the experiential reality of mind. It's just not possible. It's a performative contradiction of Determinism.
So we need not refer all the way to "miracles" to consider mind. All we have to do is to consider what you and I experience every single day and every single moment of our lives, and ask, "what is going on here?"
That physics gives us no purchase on an answer is not a slander on physics: physics itself never promised us more than access to physical mechanisms and realities; it never told us it was going to be the only road to knowledge, or to deal with non-physical realities for us. It just promised to get better and better at doing what it purported to do, namely, to unpack physical realities. Whatever is super-physical, such as mind, it made us no promise to unpack. We cannot hold physics responsible for failing to do what it never promised to do at all.
And we cannot deny the existence of mind. For only a mind can do that.
It's more complicated than that, B. Sure "brain" is physical: but a corpse has a brain, too. Yet it's missing something. You call it "subjectivity," but the truth is, that the ability to have a subjectivity is a product of mind, not a description of it: as is the ability to reason, to think, to choose, to cogitate, to perceive, to interpret, to identify, to do science and logic, and to hold an opinion.Brains and minds are the objective and the subjective aspects of the same entity.
The brain and the mind definitely interact. Nobody doubts that. But how they do...that remains much more difficult. We can, for example, track patterns of electricity shooting around in the synapses: but we can't tell from them what opinion is being formed, or how the reasoning is going, or what choice will ensue. Clearly, the physiology is not giving us the precise content of the cognition. And that's certainly super-physical, even if you don't like the term "supernatural."
See "the mind-brain" problem in philosophical research. There's a lot on it. I recommend starting with Nagel, just to grasp the issues.
I grant you the mind/brain problem is still an issue.