Yes it is. It's backward thinking: the same mistake many philosophers make. Just because consciousness is required for our kind of thought, and our awareness of the universe, it doesn't follow that these experiences are dependant upon consciousness. Our science shows the exact opposite, in fact. Consciousness works because of objective physical laws and processes.
You misunderstand me. In order for there to actually be experience there first need to be consciousness. Consciousness is the thing having the experience. No consciousness = no experience.
'Our' particular experience (individual) might differ from - say... a species which is hive-minded and is made up of many individual experiences all connected to one 'queen' who of itself experiences all those experiences as her own experience...still very much subjective.
Objective physical laws and processes are not conscious or experiencing anything. They are just the thing which consciousness is within, and cannot tell us anything about consciousness outside of ourselves.
Consciousness is objective, like everything else. Its point of view is subjective.
The 'point of view' is being experienced by consciousness and is subjective.
That would change nothing of what I said: subjectivity is a subset of the objective.
Because you subjectively believe otherwise.
Subjectivity rules. (
That is the main point.)
The objective material of the universe is not conscious itself, so does not view things objectively.
Even if some vast consciousness itself created the physical reality, and existed consciously in everything from the biggest galaxies to the smallest things - that consciousness is still subjective as a point of view.
To say that subjectivity is a subset of objectivity and by this imply that
Consciousness is thus a subset of objectivity is incorrect. Objectivity is not conscious. It can have no point of view but that which consciousness can experience through it.
In doing so, it becomes subjective.
The object is not the subject. The subject is consciousness.
'Our science' shows what consciousness can do in relation to the brain when different areas of the brain show signs of consciousness interacting with it depending what the person being tested is doing.
It is not 'the brain working' but 'consciousness working the brain'.
The brain is the object. Consciousness is something else which is not the brain nor does it think itself as the brain.
Subjectively it is not the brain and objectively it is not the brain.