Originally Posted by
LMK
I'm not sure I would phrase it 'apparent sentient behavior' because a behavior; an action, a gesture, even a vocalization might be considered material. Unless it is the behavior itself that you are referring to as apparent.
However the fact that a living thing is sentient can be beyond material, there might be no outword sign that a thought or a reasoning has taken place.
Now apply the brain/mind idea to the body/spirit. I can be seated in aan auditorium nothing is touching my body in any way from one minute to the next, but then the lights dim, a conductor begins the overture and I feel something in the music, it touches me beyond the reverberation of the sound waves that literally might hit my body, it is not a physical thing, although synaptic responses might well be occuring.
Love, anger, these might or might not begin as thoughts, they might begin by words that are read, or the sight of someone. The trigger might be beyond physiological, but may include it.
The High School pep-squad gets the fans who might otherwise just sit on the bleachers to get excited, to tap into that team 'spirit' and to feel something.
Yes, chemical responses that we might have no control over can account for a portion of emotions in a spectrum, but if we are breaking it down simply to the biology then would a word or a person that incites in one person certain feeling, not generate the same reation from all persons of similar physiology?
~L