^Ah, whoops, I see your point.
Ok, but my question about what the mind actually does then, I think you missed.
If thought is reduced to the electrical activity of the brain, doesn't that make your definitions of each, essentially synonymous?
No, not really. Thoughts can be translated because they are electrical impulses, but that does not mean that the Brain is the soul source of thought; rather just the entity that exerts them physically. We know "how", but not "why". I'm not saying that I am in anyway correct, but I see the brain as the middle man between thought and emotion. It allows for the mind to be exerted physically, but that does not necessarily mean that the mind does not exist without the brain.
One example of this is love. Using MRI's and the empirical method, we have narrowed down several biological affairs that are indicative of love, so if we did an MRI on someone who was staring at a picture of another person, we might be able to determine whether the person being tested - is in love, or not in love, with the person in the picture. But we don't know whether those indications are causes, responses, or segments of love. So, to say that love only exists physically - would be reducing love to the evidence we can observe today.
Edit: My bad, once again, I missed your point. Haha. My apologies. If thought is seen as nothing more than electrical impulses produces by the brain, then yes, thought is nothing more than physical. And if the mind is made up of nothing more than thought, then yes, the mind is physical. But I do not see thought as the nothing more than electrical impulse, nor the mind as nothing more than thought.
I guess it boils down to a matter of beliefs. Because I believe that consciousness exists after death, and therefore, do not believe that it only exists in a physical form.
But, speaking in terms of reason; you are correct. I'm sorry it took me so long to get that...haha. I'm a bit slow sometimes....