Sriram,
I am not dismissing any true findings of science.
That the Self is an emergent property of biology is not a proven fact. It is an assumption made by science because it has nothing else to say. In fact, the idea of 'emergent property' is itself iffy because no one knows why and how any emergent property arises. It is just a 'cure all' plug that you can shove in anywhere. It is a label we can fit onto anything that we don't understand.
You're fundamentally wrong about that. Suggest you try Steven Johnson's "Emergence: The Connected Lives of Ants, Brains, Cities, and Software" if you want to know why.
Life is a product of chemistry is again an assumption made by science. Not a proven fact. This is an 'emergent property' too.
Again, you misunderstand the terms "proven", "fact" and "theory" when used in a scientific context. Try any basic science primer for further info.
Science has not concluded or proved that consciousness is a product of the brain. It only assumes that because it has no other option, given its limited scope. Again an emergent property.
Science hasn't "proved" anything - that's why it has
theories. There is however overwhelming evidence that consciousness in an emergent property of the brain, just as there's overwhelming evidence that gravity causes bodies with mass to attract, overwhelming evidence that germs cause disease etc. Moreover, there's no evidence whatever for "spirit", "karma" etc, and nor indeed for any other of the pre-rationalist tribal myths that still linger around the world.
None of the above prove anything. Anything can be called an emergent property without the need to explain it further. A panacea for all ills!
Wrong - there's lots of explanation and, again, science doesn't deal in proofs.
Spiritual philosophy takes these matters several steps further back and tries to explain them. It does not contradict any of the legitimate discoveries of science. It also puts life in perspective and accounts for many paranormal phenomena, NDE's, explains why complexity has arisen, mystical experiences....and many other such. It also explains the Why instead of just the How.
Utter nonsense for reasons that have been explained to you several times now, but that you ignore nonetheless. It only doesn't contradict the findings of science in the same way that the stork conjecture doesn't contradict the findings of a midwifery textbook. It also poses far more questions that it provides answers, and tells you nothing at all about a supposed "why".