roger: You and I are saying the same thing there.
And btw, I read Dennett's book years ago, but it got lost in the great book purge, I'm afraid.
What you're saying is precisely along the lines of what I said above.
Consciousness does not deal in raw data. Rather, the functions that govern consciousness coordinate highly processed data from various areas of the brain.
The pinprick example is a classic case. Our brains are able to discern simultaneity despite the difference in distance. Same is true for our ability to perceive a red car as a red car when it drives by, despite the enormous variations in the color of the light (and the shapes it makes) that actually hits our eyes.
(And yet, if we view events that are sequential, but very close together, we will perceive them as simultaneous. For example, if you view a machine with a blinking light that makes 2 blinks close together, and you steadily decrease the time between blinks, eventually you get to a point where you see one blink, not two, even though the events are not actually simultaneous.)
Our brain is designed to take an astounding array of variable, even partial, data and render this as consistent conscious experience. Quite amazing.
But I know of no evidence which supports the idea that we're genuinely aware of everything as it happens, but lose our ability to recall that we were consciously aware of subliminal events. (The pinpricks are not subliminal, but bear with me.)
That is highly unlikely on its face, because if the brain were to do that, it would be enormously wasteful of resources. It would be much more efficient to simply never serve that information to consciousness at all. And the recent study I cited on conscious signatures demonstrates that the brain does not appear to engage the large-scale coordination of data for subliminal events as it does for events we consciously perceive.
But indeed, there's constant rewriting in order to maintain consistency. Since the pinprick to the face is not a subliminal event, and it causes pain, it gets served up to consciousness. And as you mention, when the pinprick to the foot gets served up, our awareness readjusts and changes state, replacing "I just felt a jab to the face"with "I just felt jabs to my face and foot".
All this is perfectly consistent with what I've been saying.
However, when you say that "consciousness is not a 'downstream' activity, but what we 'perceive' is merely what ends up getting the best weighting of the network", you are contradicting yourself, because that weighting must happen upstream, even for the single pinprick to the face. Because, remember, the brain has to coordinate raw data, match it with stored schema, and decide it's important enough to pay conscious attention to before we become aware of the event "jab to the face".
The slide projector experiment you mention is another example. Hopefully I can find links to better studies than the ones I cited above, but it is as you say: "our decisions are made below the level of conscousness, and get reported to us afterwards". That's what I mean by downstream.
Marvin's case is another very clear example of downstream consciousness -- in his case, emotional consciousness -- where we can actually identify the pathway and discern that bodily response comes first, awareness later.
All the examples you provide in that post simply provide further confirmation of what I'm saying.
Your conclusion, however, is incorrect:
talking about being conscious of something or not is hopelessly inadequate
It still makes sense to speak of being consciously aware of some things and not of others. In fact, studies of subliminal v. conscious processing depend on it.
Obviously, we are conscious beings. And it's not meaningless (or "hopelessly inadequate") to say that if I watch a movie and my girlfriend sleeps through it, I was consciously aware of what happened on the screen and she was not.
What these experiments do is to intentionally probe the boundaries, and explore the fluidity of conscious awareness across time.
ETA: And btw, the multiple drafts model is a kind of cinematic consciousness -- as our experience "refreshes", we're continually served up a new "now", which is a mixture of input from the world, and associations and fill-ins provided by the brain itself.
Also, there's another way to look at the pinprick experiment. It's possible (I don't think we can measure this yet) that the subject was never aware of "jab to the face". We know about the delay in the flinch response, but we also know that awareness lags behind physical response. So it's possible that the signal from the foot is received before we have time to become aware of the jab to the face; the "I've been jabbed in the face" scenario is scrubbed in favor of the "I've been jabbed in the face and foot" scenario, which is what we become aware of.