I've been pondering this with several other friends. If you take a psychology class, you learn all about the brain, neurons, and neurotransmitters. But at some point, do you wonder how do we feel a sense of "personality" and consciousness based on nothing more than electrical signals firing off?
For example, I know we have an amygdala and frontal lobe where our personality is formed. But what about the chemical make up of neurons? How does that cause us to feel certain ways?
Does anyone feel like the field of neurology fails to explain a lot of the low-level fundamentals?
EDIT: At birth, when does the first neuron fire, and how does it sustain itself?
This is one of the central questions of cognitive neuroscience today, and scientists aren't even close to a convincing answer. It is exactly the wrong question for an ask HN post -- it's like a bunch of sailors speculating about quantum mechanics. Please read the papers. Here's a great introductory video for a lay audience -- Dan Dennett's TED talk: http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/dan_dennett_on_our_consci...
I do sympathize with your point that the abstract scientific jargon seems to leave one wanting for a "real" answer, but since the science itself is way incomplete at this point, any attempt to pare it down will result in something that's no better than random guessing.