It is not merely as assertion. Material reactions alone can never generate awareness. A material reaction can cause further reactions, but this does not define awareness.
OK, that's an attempt at an argument, fair enough. What is it about consciousness, to your understanding, that precludes it being a material reaction to material events, though? You've made that statement like it's readily apparent, but it should be fairly obvious to you that a significant number of people here don't see it that way, so what's your basis for that statement?
A conscious entity is not a reaction - it comprises simultaneous awareness of the current states of many material elements, something which defies any material definition because material elements have no perception of the state of other material elements - all they can do is pass on reactions.
But the consciousness is not the brain, it's a result of the activity of the brain. The brain is not aware, but then we are not just brains, because if we were our consciousness would persist after brain ACTIVITY ceased, and that does not appear to be the case. Consciousness is an element of the patterns of activity - the 'thought' - happening because of the brain.
In comparing animal behaviour with human behaviour the big difference is that most animal behaviour can be defined by predictable reactions based on biological instincts and learnt experiences without the need for conscious awareness.
But not all animal behaviour. And much of human behaviour can be accurately predicted. Is the part that can't a) just more complex, or b) functionally random or c) the result of some non-material aspect of humanity influencing the material in some way that so far has completely defied detection?
Humans are able to demonstrate their conscious awareness not by mere reactions, but by acts of deliberation to communicate what they are aware of in the forms of art and language.
You are begging the question, here. You are citing your understanding of conscious awareness in order to support your contention of what human consciousness is or is not.
You may try to argue that some of the higher forms of animals can demonstrate some evidence of conscious awareness, but this still does not comprise evidence of material explanations for awareness - God brought animals into existence as well as humans.
Except that, in most iterations of the Christian creation mythos the entirety of the rest of the living world is 'spiritually' different to human beings - we're supposed to be special. You might not feel that way, I don't know, but this point is raised as a counter in those circumstances, not as an argument in support of consciousness being a purely material consideration.
No doubt some humans will endeavour to try to generate conscious awareness from ever more complex material entities but they are doomed to failure because only God can create the spiritual entity of awareness which is you.
He asserted. Rather more worrying, in some aspects, than people trying to generate artificial consciousnesses is humans creating artificial consciousness whilst trying to do something else... People deliberately trying to create a consciousness are going to be operating with the idea that they are dealing with something self-aware, but people who do it by accident will not necessarily have those considerations in mind.
O.