What is the use of brain?
For some people, little to nothing.
I think you’re trying to ask whether cogitation happens in the
brain or in the
person, right?
I would answer that the physical act happens physically (and therefore, locally to the physical brain) and that the experience is an experience of the
person.
I don’t know what God is so lets put it aside.
Nice try.
I would say that this question isn’t a tangent, but is critical to your question. Let’s not put it aside. Rather, let me ask you some questions:
Presuming that God exists (that’s a reasonable presumption here, isn’t it?)…
Does God have physical being?
Is God ‘local’ to anything physical?
Back to our discussion. How do you causally relate soul to body?
OK… so, you really want to discuss the mind-body problem, then?
Let’s use Decartes’ classic examples: you smack your foot on something (physical act), which causes neurons to fire (physical act), which causes the experience of pain (mental state). Therefore, body causes non-physical experience.
Or: mind has an experience of thirst (mental state). Brain fires neurons (physical act), muscles move arm (physical act), hand grabs glass and moves to mouth (physical act), water flows into mouth (physical act). Therefore, mental state leads to physical act.
“How” it happens has been part of philosophical debate for centuries… I don’t think we’re gonna solve that one here. “Whether” it happens seems pretty straightforward. (Unless, of course, you hang your hat on materialism, and also have a theory of the mind that’s materialist and which you’d like to share…)
Causality requires locality. You didn’t consider this in your model or drawing.
You’re the one who keeps asserting that “causality requires locality”… and without attribution, at that! Unless you can prove your assertion, then we aren’t required to include it as part of the model.
