You're saying infallible sequential humans cannot simulate a parallel algorithm?
I disbelieve you.
If you claim that one person can handle everything that's going on in the brain simultaneously, rather than sequentially, then
I disbelieve
you.
But let's assume that's not what we're talking about, and instead we're talking about, say, a staff of hypothetical infallible humans working at the same time.
Ok, then what are we really talking about?
Let's say that we've got this robot wired up, and all we do is to introduce a step where there's essentially just a pause at one moment when whatever calculations are happening are switched over to our staff of mathematically infallible humans who get the outputs as inputs, run the calculations, then feed the results back in.
In that case, you're just doing the equivalent of putting the robot on pause.
Is the robot conscious during this pause? Given that nothing is happening in the robot's hardware, how could it be?
So if you, in effect, chain this process so that we're bouncing back and forth between the robot and the infallible staff, does the robot's consciousness flicker in and out? (Note that the robot brain has to perform every other step -- if the staff of humans is passing inputs and outputs to each other to perform, nothing's running on the hardware at all.)
I seriously doubt that you'd get an intermittent consciousness from this setup.