But these words and phrases you use - "mind", "focal point of perception", and "information vortex" have no definitive definition in material terms.
We don't have 'definitive' definitions for anything Alan, so what should we do, throw out all the knowledge that we have accrued to date through observation and enquiry and substitute in its place your lexicon of souls and gods which have entirely no evidence and no definition at all ? Is that really a forward step for an enquiring mind ?
There has to be a single entity of conscious perception for all this information in your brain. And it can't be defined or compared to the instinctive, predictable behaviour of animals which can be entirely defined by material reactions. Conscious perception is not a reaction, just an awareness of reality.
And any prey animal that was not aware of the predator creeping up on it would not survive to pass on the mechanisms by which that awareness is procured. All creatures with brains have highly developed and refined perception of their surroundings, this is what brains do for us; try living without a brain and we would not survive for more than a second or two.
As for a 'single entity' of perception, it would be slightly more accurate to talk in terms of a 'focal point' of perception; the word 'entity' can suggest something of distinct ontology operating within a creature; this makes no sense and there is no evidence in support of it. We get no further forward by imagining that a dolphin has to have another little invisible dolphin inside it to be the thing which experiences sight and sound and awareness. That is what brains brains do, they synchronise and orchestrate all those multitudinous information flows procured via external senses and a central nervous system into an apparently singular synthesised information flow that we might call 'experience'. Your 'single entity of perception' is better described as the 'conscious self' which is a derivative product of brain function, not something separate to it.