I have explained this to you many times, as have others. You're not paying attention.
You consistently assert that a brain is required to interpret the results of a computer. We point out that the brain is a computer; that everything it does can also be done by a computer.
You assert that it is somehow more. You can't say what, or how, or why you think so. You just insist that it is.
That's your magic bean.
You may "point out" that "the brain is a computer", but I might also point out that your aunt is a bicycle.
I see you're back on your Church-Turing kick. Well, can't help you there. You'll probably die with that needle in your arm.
And by the way, no brain is needed to interpret the results of any physical process, including what a computer does. It does what it does, end of story.
Now, on the other hand, if you've decided that what the computer actually does (change voltage states, run a fan, emit heat, play speakers, light up a monitor, spew ink on paper) is supposed to
represent something else... then you're damn right you need an interpreter! To say otherwise is patently absurd.
Without an observing mind, there are no representations, just similarities.
And this is where
your magic bean comes in -- the one you're holding and accusing me of stealing....
The machine is doing what it's doing, period.
If it's supposed to represent something else, fine... you need a brain in that system to decide what it's supposed to represent, otherwise it represents nothing.
If you insist that it does, then you're holding the magic bean, because you're claiming that the imagined representation exists somewhere outside the mind of the person who decides that A represents B.
You're insisting that the relationship "A represents B" is
itself objectively real, and therefore requires no involvement by any brain to decide this. (It's called entification, and you are not by any means alone in engaging in it.)
Hello, magic bean!