If the mind is an effect of the brain, but still a wholly separate entity, it should be able to exist independently, right? Yet the experiments I've cited show strong--overwhelming--evidence that this isn't so.
Well, not in my understanding of the word "entity".
So, as Hans has pointed out, it comes down to what you mean by a "separate entity". If you mean a different concept (mental construct) that is wholly and utterly dependent on the body, that can never exist separately from the body, that is continuously caused by the body (as opposed to a cause that lets the effect just go on its own), then I agree.
What do you mean by "mental construct"? I have a mental construct of a unicorn. Doesn't mean it exists. But the mind does.
But that's a very silly way to use the language. It would be like saying the little dabs of paint on a canvas "cause" the picture but that the picture is a logically separate entity. You'd ignore the fact that you can't have the picture without the little dabs of paint, and that when you change the little dabs of paint, you change the picture.
Good example. Thanks. And it shows that the relationship between the picture and the dabs of paint is logical, thus its a property, while the relationship between the mind and the brain is experimental, thus it's not.
It's logically impossible for the dabs to change while the picture wouldn't be changed. It's logically impossible to change the picture and not to change the dabs. But with mind-brain its different, otherwise neuroscience wouldn't be such an innnovator in the field of mind-body relationship.
And you've yet to show how the relationship between mind and brain is different than that from running to legs. All you've claimed is that the former is conceivable and the latter is not, yet I've shown repeatedly that neither is more conceivable than the other.
I don't think you did, lets draw.
Your best attempt at responding is the business about a body with sensory disability. You disregard a great deal of the problems I offered, and you're talking about a body--not a disembodied mind.
The mind of such a body, not having any sensory input, would be like a disembodied mind.
So for about the tenth time, I ask you, do you have ANY empirical evidence whatsoever to support dualism? I notice you keep ignoring this question.
If I do, that is because I do not think my dualism rests on empirical evidence, but on concept analysis. I do not have any empirical evidence whatsoever to support dualism, and if that is the criteria for you, then there is no sense in further discussion.
