Piggy,
Do you agree with my, admittedly basic, understanding of how a sensory neuron might make a synaptic connection that establishes the basis of my argument? How many times do you feel this happens between millions of neurons before something happens which is not predicted by the initial biochemistry?
I say it is only a couple of times, at most, before the tens-of-millions of synapses, each capable of electro-chemically strengthening or weakening their hundreds of millions of connections due to stimulus response, before I'm not able to precisely predict what comes out.
I can, however, at least in the example of huge mammilian brains, predict that things like memories, emotional and viscreral reactions, and some basic need to self-identify those things with one's physical being (the thing that is, after all, only the meat that the nervous system is supported by,) result in something like conciousness.
I honestly, and I know that I am in a minority in this, simply fail to see where a quantitative problem, "we can't model this exactly because the numbers get too huge", becomes a qualitative problem, "we can't model this because something extraordinary happens."
But I do understand that most people don't see it this way.
I just don't know why.