davidsmith73 said:
That's your view on the objective nature of subjective experience which can be discussed separately from the characteristics which primarily lead us to identify and label subjective (mental) versus objective (physical) things. In other words, regardless of whether you think the "feeling of pain" is simply a physical process, you have made it necessary to distinguish to two in order for your argument to make sense. You have the "feeling of pain" and you have the physical process. They must have different qualities in order for them to be distinguished.
I disagree. Of course they have different qualities, as do all unidentical things, but that does not mean that the "feeling of pain" is anything other than a physical process. While the "feeling of pain" is a private (i.e. unobservable to others, hence subjective) phenomenon, it can still be physical. Suppose, though, that there were a way to detect and broadcast the exact physical actions of nerves and the brain to others. They could then exerience the exact same "feeling of pain", and it would no longer be subjective.
davidsmith73 said:
I am not trying to say that "the mind is separate from the body".
Actually, you are. If you go through that tutorial that Mercutio linked, you'll find that the simple statement that there is a "mental" realm
must indicate that it is in some way separate from the body, or physical realm. (I highly recommend that link.)
davidsmith73 said:
I am trying to argue that the rules of logic and hence mathematics, which are the fundamental routes to knowledge of physical processes, can be more appropriately placed in the same category as the "feeling of pain", i.e., mental.
Logic and mathmatics are tools designed by our very physical brains for understanding the world around us. They do not exist separately.
Here's a story told to me by a friend of mine. (Yeah, I know, anecdotal evidence

):
He had a friend who was mentally ill, experiencing extreme paranoia. This was back in the 1960's and medicine was much more crude then, but the psychiatrist recommended a lobotomy. The operation was quite successful, by 1960's standards. Her feelings of paranoia mostly went away. Unfortunately, so did her logic. Once, she nearly burnt her house down because the sight of her stove on fire did not make her fearful (they had excised that part of the brain.) So if this story is true (and I have no reason to doubt it because my friend had nothing to gain by lying), even logic is a physical phenomen which can be affected and even eliminated by physical means.
davidsmith73 said:
I agree with this. However, I am arguing what the physical world and objective understanding really is.
Yes, I understand. My contention is that
everything could be, in principle, objective. I am sure we will never get there, but we keep making strides in that direction. The boundary between physical and mental grows more tenuous every day.