The “self” doesn’t exist in the scientist’s scheme of things?..
You must run some sort of removal company associated with football.
You didn’t ask for a definition of self. You asked what physical phenomena are involved. You have been given the answer.
As to the next two points, your link, an article by Raymond Tallis, doesn’t refute anything I said. He is well enough acquainted with neurobiology to know what parts of the brain are associated with consciousness and decisions. This is information any graduate would know. But Tallis appears to be a dualist. At least, he infers that there must be something other than chemical and electrical activity which produces, for example, consciousness and decision making.
Unfortunately, he doesn’t say what this is. He is just reluctant to accept that this IS all that there is. A common enough reaction from most people. But it isn’t acceptable to simply say that ‘it doesn’t work like that’. He needs to say how it DOES work. A shrug of the shoulders doesn’t count.
So here’s an opportunity for you to describe how it does actually work. How something immaterial connects with the physical. To explain the conduit between the two. And answers such as ‘the soul’ are nothing more than Tallis’s shrug of the shoulders. Incidentally, I wouldn’t spend too much time looking for an answer from Tallis that infers the divine. He’s an atheist.
And no, you have no more control over your mental activity than you do over the workings of your spleen. Unlike your spleen, however, the activity of the mind in some cases calls for options. When one option is chosen, you have the sense of having made a choice. That is, you have a sense of control over the outcome.
As regards truth, if someone lies to you, you have an emotional response. If you feel that something is bad, as opposed to good, you have an emotional response. If your sense of freedom is restricted, you have an emotional response. If your sense of justice is thwarted, you have an emotional respone. When you feel love, it is an emotional response.
All these responses are emotional and you can physically see different parts of the brain light up in an MRI scan when someone thinks of these concepts. That is, there are areas of the brain associated with them. This is indisputable.
And of course parts of the brain themselves do not realise they exist. Although your point in mentioning that escapes me. Incidentally, it’s because the brain contains no sensory nerve endings. You can sense, spatially, where any part of your body is with the exception of the brain.
So…where is this connection between whatever you think the mind is, and the brain? If you have no answer, I’m going with what we have already, thanks very much.