I am simply trying to highlight the difference between interaction and reaction.
Why do you hang so much on this, and I'm still not clear on what special meaning you derive from this. Throw cold water into hot fat and they will 'interact' but they will also, and very obviously, 'react' - so don't try it at home. The terms could be used interchangeably.
In a purely scientific sense I can see no difference because everything is defined by events and consequences (reactions) to events. The deterministic rules of science will dictate that all events are consequences to previous events, with possible exceptions in the quantum field of science which show that some events can occur spontaneously without any discernible cause.
So, we seem to live in a deterministic universe but there are some aspects, such as quantum stuff, that appear to behave differently but since work is on-going your assumptions may be presumptive.
What I am implying is that the intelligently controlled interaction between us is not driven by reactions which are entirely controlled by the laws of science.
You can imply until the cows come home, Alan, but this statement is fallacious in several ways: you are begging the question and arguing from ignorance and personal incredulity.
Which leads to the possibility that our perceived interaction could be driven by quantum events which derive from something outside the deterministic rules of science.
Aside from the word salad element this is a
non sequitur. Your tendency to argue from personal incredulity has, I think, overwhelmed you.