I have never claimed any such thing.
steenkh claimed this. I even quoted him in my reply. Can you not pretend every single reply is directed at you?
The point is that people are trying to do an end run around the laws by asserting that something might exist that does not interact. Something that does not interact, by definition, does not exist.
No, the point is that some people are claiming that if something interacts with the brain then the particle which is involved in the interaction can be detected (you would probably say "by definition" or something else equally wrong). i.e. if something interacts via particles with the brain, it will show up in basic particle physics experiments. This is not correct, as I have shown. A particle can interact weakly enough or on a short enough time scale as to be undetectable, yet have a real physical effect.
Edit: Ah, I see where you're coming from. You're conflating two completely separate points.
Huh? Are you just saying this to try to save face?
First, we have, as Sean Carroll explains, definitive evidence that there are no new laws of physics that both act at everyday scales and are strong enough to account for any form of woo.
What does this even mean? (Please explain it in your own words)
The statement, as it is written, is nonsensical. We don't know if QFT (i.e. the current best approximation we have at the energy scales it explains) is the best and more accurate physical law of reality that can be written down. It almost certainly isn't, because it isn't compatible with a bunch of other stuff that we have equal reason to believe is true. Therefore, there is probably a better law of physics out there that is waiting to be discovered that is better and will replace QFT.
I don't even know what you mean by "strong enough to account for any form of woo", or how that has any bearing on this discussion.
Second, we have the definition that something that does not interact does not exist.
Here, you clearly need some help with this, so I'll walk you through it:
existence -- the state or fact of having being especially independently of human consciousness and as contrasted with nonexistence.
This is from merriam-webster. Probably the most pertinent definition to the discussion. Do you see how the word "interact" does not appear in the definition? This means that "interaction" is not a necessary logical property of existence according to the definition. i.e. if you want to claim that something which does not interact does not exist, you need to show a logical argument why this is necessarily so.
If you want to look at various other sources discussing existence in a physical or philosophical sense, you will see that none of them discuss interaction as a necessary property for existence.
The lesson to take home from this is that just because you use the words "by definition" does not make it a definition, and it certainly does not make it true.
As I've said several times before, a system containing particle X which does not interact is identical to a system not containing particle X. So a particle that does not interact is a particle that does not exist, and the hypotheticals raised in this thread that do not interact likewise do not exist.
This is so wrong it is laughable. If you have two quantum systems each consisting of one particle that do not interact with each other, this is physically different than having one quantum system, by any set of non-idiot definitions of "exist", "interact", and "system". And both particles exist, again by any reasonable definition of "exist". I honestly have no idea what the hell you are thinking or trying to say.
Any other incorrect physics-sounding statements that you want to arbitrarily make up and be wrong about? Just say "by definition", I am sure you will fool some people about your lack of understanding.