More or less.
Most biologists don't know or care. Most biologists who know and care believe the brain is a TM, because the alternatives involve magic pixies.
There are really only three alternatives. The first is that the brain is actually less powerful than a TM, which wouldn't really mean much, because we could still build a conscious TM. So we can dismiss that as equivalent to choice #2, the brain is as powerful as a TM.
Choice #3, the brain is more powerful than a TM, suffers from the fundamental problem that we have no way to envision or formalize anything that is more powerful than a TM that doesn't involve an explicit reference to something magical like an "oracle" or the ability to code data finer than the Plank length. While these may not be explicitly impossible, we've never been able to come up with anything at all credible that provides a physical instantiation of such things. Instead, we get idiocies like Penrose, who misunderstands Goedel's theorem (Goedel's theorem says computers make mistakes, hence humans can't be computers, because.... humans never make mistakes? Excuse me) and quantum physics (why do QM effects lead to consciousness in human microtubules, but not in amoebae, which also have them?)
Here's what
one noted commentator(a neurologist) has to say:
So in other words, "we don't understand cognition. We don't understand QM, either. QM appears magical, so maybe it will give us the magical non-computational properties we need to produce something more powerful than a TM."
So the general opinion is that "more powerful than a TM" is not a realistic option. Which leaves, for lack of anything better, "equivalent to a TM" as literally the only candidate left standing.