I'm not sure the invalidation claim is necessarily correct. Doesn't even an "illusion" arise from "perception, evidence or experience, scientific or otherwise"?
The sense of there being an observer arises from an unexamined assumption.
While aspects of ones sense of self may be illusory, the sense of a singular and consistent self and the self itself is a construct of reinforced and suppressed sub-selves (so to speak) that makes it no more of an illusion than a car or building being an illusion just because they are constructions of applicable sub-components.
I agree. The term "self" or "selfhood" covers a wide range of phenomena. Plenty of which are very much real.
When you get into the sub realm of "mental selfhood" then afaia it's all unreal. Of course some aspects you need just to communicate. The observer and the experiencer have zero ontological validity.
But they're so favoured it's not easy for the mind running this programme to let them go. To the mind it seems like death and appropriate defensive responses are triggered.
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