I agree the brain appears to have some computer-like features.
No. It
is a computer.
But there is other stuff happening in the brain that has little or nothing to do with what we would normally associate with a computer
What you personally may or may not associate with a computer is rather beside the point.
and yet could easily have a significant part to play in what the brain as a whole is actually doing.
What stuff, and what part, and how?
This is silly. We don't have to speak of consciousness for it to exist.
No. But we do if we are to define it.
Where is the self-reference in the short program I posted earlier once it was "compiled"? Rocketdodger agreed that program implemented "SRIP" and it was based on a template he provided.
And I disagreed. It has self-reference, but it doesn't
do anything, so it does not implement SRIP.
This is a conjecture. (Not an established fact. See
Quantised Time.)
It doesn't matter to this point whether time is quantised, only space. (In fact, it almost certainly doesn't matter that space is quantised either, but that's another argument for another day.)
No matter how finely you subdivide time, you are still bound by thermodynamics on the number of operations you can perform, and no hypercomputer is physically possible.
Thesis... not necessarily a fact. There is no proof whatsoever that the next step "up" from a UTM necessarily requires infinite amounts of work in finite time. Just because it might seem that way to your intuition doesn't mean that it is so.
My statement is precisely correct. There is no model of computation between the Church-Turing thesis and hypercomputation, and the latter is physically impossible.
Do you really want to argue that brains might be more powerful than Turing Machines in some manner that no-one has been able to formulate, by a mechanism no-one has been able to postulate, for reasons no-one has been able to demonstrate?
No. You are fabricating "facts" from conjectures and hypotheses in order to force "conclusions" that fit your belief system - apparently that the true nature of the universe must necessarily be as described by "digital physics".
Nope.