>>12947730lol I knew this would rankle some CSfag-tier response but I don't have to prove anything because I'm right
Yes, the brain can carry out an algorithmic procedure, so in a philosophical sense you might argue that the brain has the capacity to act as a Turing machine. However, this is no different to when we used to talk about the human body and mind in terms of pressures and mechanistic procedures as we did when the industrial revolution was in full swing. It's a convenient analogy, both based in fact but both horrifically misleading when people with no knowledge of biology take the analogy to mean that the brain really is a machine, or stress really is a form of mental pressure, or whatever.
Anyone who thinks the brain actually operates like a computer should try looking deeper into the analogies between your computer parts and your brain. It all turns to shit very rapidly. You don't have a processor (your brain doesn't process or store data like a computer does, at all), just for a start. If your computer were like your brain, if you "saved" an image, it would be deleted almost instantly, nothing would be in the memory, and the processor would be idling, wondering what to do.