Even if it is the case that consciousness cannot be accounted for in terms of energy and matter, that still does not excuse the nonsense which gets talked about quantum mechanics.
'Newtonian mechanics gets used for the very good reason that is an excellent approximation to quantum mechanics in the everyday world, and the mathematics is a whole lot simpler.'
That is wrong, Leslie. Newtonian mechanics gets used purely because it, alone, is applicable to the everyday world - things at the 'human level', i.e. that we can see. Mutatis mutandis, quantum mechanics gets used for precisely the same reason : because it is applicable to the more arcane, microscopic, material world.
However, another astonishing discovery is that, at least some of the phenomena hitherto thought to be unique to QM, would also be observable at the mechanistic level of Newtonian physics. I can't cite my source for that, but if/when I come across it again, I'll find somehere to post it on this board or PM you.
You seem to admire Newtonian mechanics because the thinking required is entirely linear and unambiguous ; while the paradoxical phenomena of QM, such as wave-particle duality, entanglement and non-locality are the very stuff of QM.
Are you aware that it is the most tested (and successful) theory ever, and not just because it is the last-comer. Something like 80 % of our industrial production is said to rely on it. However, it has actually also been proven that it can never be superseded, i.e. never be improved upon. It is the ultimate paradigm - again, in practical terms only at the smallest most fundamental level. The guys who had the best handle on its mysterious nature (inevitable since, surely the interface with the Holy Spirit), apart from Wigner and one or two others, seem to have been two of the the earliest pioneers, the father/founder of QM, Max Planck, whom I quoted (not Wigner, for all his empirically-based refinement of the metaphysics), and Niels Bohr. To read Bohr's quotes on Wikiquote is a delight for anyone who is fed up to the teeth with the obdurate atheist madness, with their insane scientism.
Consequently, the best theoretical physicists are able to use the many paradoxes as staging-posts and springboards from which to relaunch the intervening, linear logic of their empirical research. QM is fretted through with mysteries as opaque and repugnant to reason as the paradoxes we know as the mysteries of the Christian faith, but here's the thing - they have been tested and proven empirically.
Came across this a short while ago :
What great physicists have said about immateriality and consciousness | Uncommon Descent
Bornagain77's post no 1 is characteristically informative. He has synthesised an enormous amount of information on physics and indeed other sciences, all of which he collates to give a coherent and rather wonderful picture.