Which is exactly my point. No human is the same. And, for example, we don't know that you and I perceive light the same way. The way I perceive the color red might be closer to the way you perceive yellow, or vice-versa. Yet regardless of whether or not we perceive it identically, we both call it red, and the color truely is the same.I believe that without our senses, our brain would probably also work in a deterministic way, no magical randomizer in there (IMHO).
But how do you make a computer "perceive" something? Even if you figured out how to program it to perceive things exactly the way humans do - it will always be biased in the direction of the programmer. You would write the code differently than I would, and guess what? Yours would probably be similar in personality to you, and mine would probably be similar in personality to me... although that sort of thing cannot scientifically be proven. Which brings me to my next point...
There are things which can be scientifically proven, and things which cannot. I'll call those which can be proven "provable", and everything else is "unprovable". Although some people might claim that they have proof, for example, of ESP Can you prove that the human brain really does work on pure logic? You say some of it is based on randomness, but what is randomness? In other words, if you know the state of every single particle in the universe, could you tell me what the state of every single particle is going to be in a nanosecond? No, because things can change rapidly in a nanosecond. In less time? What's the smallest indivisible unit of time? Could you tell me then? So what is randomness?