The prevailing point of view among non-religious scientists (as well as here) is that mental processes (the mind) are reducible to the physical processes in the brain. This part is rather uncontroversial, even Searle agrees with it. Out of the alternatives described on Wikipedia Emergent Materialism is probably the closest to the mainstream thought here:
when matter is organized in the appropriate way (i.e., organized in the way that living human bodies are organized), mental properties emerge
though Eliezer does not like the term emergence.
This point of view is described pretty well in Sean Carroll's classic Free Will Is as Real as Baseball, with free will standing in for your favorite mental property.
The prevailing point of view among non-religious scientists (as well as here) is that mental processes (the mind) are reducible to the physical processes in the brain. This part is rather uncontroversial, even Searle agrees with it. Out of the alternatives described on Wikipedia Emergent Materialism is probably the closest to the mainstream thought here:
Emergent materialism explicitly denies that mental properties are reducible to physical processes, so I don't think it's closest to mainstream thought here. Emergence is often used in philosophy as an al...
I did a search about property dualism and I couldn't see much written here on this site.