Bernardo said:
So can you come up with anything else? What's your best argument in defense of materialism? What's your best argument against monistic idealism? Apologies in advance for the fact that I will have to ignore trolls given my limited time. As for the rest of you, your input will be sincerely appreciated.
What about the fact that the interpretations of QM having consciousness as essential for the collapse of the wavefunction do not have any epistemological precedence at the moment? Consciousness does not appear that important from what we know.
Besides how do you make a clear difference between what you propose and Brahman (which is impersonal, we deal with neutral monism, consciousness appearing as an extension at a lower level) for example? Or from Berkeley's system (God absolutely necessary, more souls) or Kant's? I really doubt you can although I have no doubt your book is full of arguments.
Now I personally think that we miss something extremely important at the moment* but I understand also why many philosophers and scientists consider materialism (physicalism) as the first choice paradigm of today (thus a accept that physicalism is the main paradigm at the moment).
Still that does not mean that I reject idealist solutions** (at least some of them are still fully viable, even supernaturalism is not out of question; actively pursuing alternative research programmes should not be discouraged, the only condition is to avoid claims of having the truth, the only true path and so on) but unfortunately today they have no precedence over physicalist ones, the philosophical arguments pros physicalism, informed by Science, are much stronger today than those pros idealism. Finally a middle way is always a much better alternative than believing strongly that something is true and realizing later that it is not so.
In your place I would avoid a triumphalist tone, write your book and show your results to us all. I'm sure that critical thinkers will accept your results if your arguments are indeed so persuasive.
*at least consciousness may need something qualitatively new to be really understood, not necessarily amounting to idealism; in my view it is premature now to make claims equivalent with those of Lord Kelvin at the end of 19th century who thought that Physics was almost complete, very few new discoveries ahead
**being also a fallibilist in non rivial ways and a moderate philosophical skeptic I doubt we will ever find arguments which to strongly 'anchor' our knowledge so that we should always remain open to possible rational non trivial changes in ALL parts of what we accept today as knowledge