But I have to ask the obvious question -
How can a group of basic atomic particles define perception?
The atoms don't. The pattern of activity varies, and that variation is our subjective experience of the perception.
Any pattern to me is irrelevant because the pattern and any function of the pattern can only perceived from outside the pattern.
No. The pattern can only be perceived from the outside, but the subjective feeling of perception is the change in the patter - we are the pattern, and when the pattern changes that's us feeling the perception.
Internally, the pattern is still just a group of particles.
And energy, yes.
Take the images transmitted to the brain through our eyes. The image of light gets focused on to a light sensetive surface. Receptors on that surface transmit signals to several brain cells. The state of the brain cells is then interpreted to either :
a) form an image in the conscious awareness
or:
b) induce a reaction based in the interpretation of the image.
I can fully understand how option (b) will work in the material brain.
But option (a) requires something to perceive the content of many brain cells at once to form the image - not just a series of generated reactions.
No, it doesn't. You are the pattern. As the pattern changes slightly, so you change slightly - in this case, you change such that you are perceiving the image. You don't need to be aware of the pattern to be the pattern any more than you need to be aware of the process of the eye converting incident light into electro-chemical signals in order to see the light.
I can understand how a pattern of brain cells can define an image, but you then need something to interpret what is in those individual brain cells in order to perceive the image.
Yes, you.
This "something" can't be just another set of brain cells because you are left with an infinite regress of what inteprets the content of these brain cells ... and so on.
It's not the cells, it's the pattern of activity.
I find it difficult to explain this logic in words, but I hope you can understand it.
I think so - I hope so. You keep falling back on the idea that the brain is us, but that's not what I'm getting at. The Brain is like the hardware of a computer, whereas we are the software resident in that brain.
To return to your idea of a soul, though, a few questions.
How can a completely non-physical agency - the soul - interact with the universe? How does it know what we know, see what we see?
More to the point how does it get the 'instructions' that it has back into the body undetected? We have no widespread measure of anomolous activity in the brain, we can select any neuron and track input and output without seeing results that aren't the result of the underlying chemistry - where does the soul kick back in?
O.