So your objection is premise 1. — khaled
I didn't mention any of the premises of your argument as your argument is poorly formed, semi gibberish. It also contains a premise that contradicts the conclusion (you assert that mental states are not physical and then conclude that they are! Jeez). My advice, which you will ignore of course, is to stick to this form:
1. If P, then Q
2. P
3. Therefore Q
And then simply pile them up.
I'll just do it for you, as that'll save time. Here's what you should have said:
1. If an event is physical, then it has a physical cause
2. Mental events are physical
3. Therefore, mental events have physical causes
Now that it has been properly laid out - and of course, the confusion that infects your 'argument' is such that you can deny that any proper argument I lay out on your behalf was not the argument you were trying to express - it is clear that premise 2 is question begging. That is, it presupposes that minds are physical and so renders the argument impotent to 'show' that minds are physical.
Alternatively one might argue like this (this argument, at least, is not question begging):
1. Events of one kind have causes of the same kind
2. Mental events cause sensible events
3. Therefore, mental events and sensible events are events of the same kind
Now I think premise 1 of that argument is false, but I am willing to accept that it might be true as some undoubtedly have the rational intuition that it is, else the so-called problem of interaction would never have been considered a problem. So, for the sake of argument alone, I am willing to accept premise 1 of that argument. And premise 2 is clearly true.
However, in order to get from the conclusion of that argument to the conclusion that mental events are physical events (and thus that minds are physical things), one would need to stipulate that sensible events are physical events. And the problem with that is that, in light of the conclusion of the above argument, we now have no evidence they are, and stunningly good evidence they are not.
For this argument is a good one:
4. Mental events are immaterial events
5. Therefore, sensible events are immaterial events
Why do I say that it is a good one? Because there's evidence minds are immaterial - and thus that mental events are immaterial events - and no evidence that minds are material. Not that I know of, anyway. In other words, you need to deny 4 and insist that sensible events are physical events (which will then get you to the conclusion that mental events are physical events). But to do that you'd need evidence that mental events are not immaterial events - that is, you'd need evidence that minds are physical and not immaterial. You don't have any of those. I, by contrast, have a ton of arguments that 4 is true. 14 on the last count.
So, to be clear: I see no reason to think that events of one kind cannot cause events of a differnt kind. But even if there was reason to think that dubious premise true, it would not show that minds are physical, rather it would show that the sensible is mental.
If I don’t see anything original in the reply I’m not responding. — khaled
Oh boo hoo. There's nothing original in it, because there was nothing original in what you said and you just committed the same old mistakes.