The first of which is the understand that the spoon is a spoon prior to any perception. Where do your steps begin, if not with a material spoon? You have yet to explain this.
Explain what. YOUR ASSUMPTION? The assumption of phenomenologists hold before we had neuroscience? Please.
Next time you will ask me about how can I think that two objects with the same shape but different weights will not fall at different speeds.

And yet, you claim you have read something about how perception works!
Ok, lets go, slowly. You say that I have to
understand that a spoon is a spoon prior to any perception. How do you
KNOW that. Well, you don't, you assume it, it is
obvious you say. You have to imply, then, that our perception works like a video camera. The world is already there, no matter if we record it (perceive it) or not. Simply Common sense, like assuming that heavy objects fall faster than less heavier ones.
Here, in case you have noticed, I have draw a picture in which you can doubt about common sense
ASSUMPTIONS.
Lets continue. How can we know if our assumptions are correct? Well, we have science for that, I don't need to resort to your opinions, I can do an experiment. In the case of objects, well, I just let them fall and measure their speed.
What can we do, which kind of experiments, to answer the question about if what we are seeing is "already there"? I'm sure you have an enlightened answer for this.
The world is already luminous. It does not need consciousness to illuminate it.
I already know those words impress you, but they are still babbling.
Of course. Which is why I've also brought up Dennett in this thread. His particular take on phenomenology is particularly relevant to this discussion, but you're ignoring it. You're the one that seems rooted in autophenomenology and the bounds of sense.
I'm not in to Daniel Dennett at all. Pixy loves it, but his main work is old now, and obsolete.
What you're missing, BDZ, is that whilst I (and Piggy and everyone else here) understand that perception is fallible, this in no way implies that reality is immaterial. This is your leap, and it remains unsupported.
"every one else"

like Piggy (what a surprise) you believe everyone is
against me. Sorry to bust your bubble, but some of the most hard core materialists of the forum have been here, and have understood perfectly that what I said (from certain point of view) is identical to
some forms of materialism (the ones that are naturalistic and not based on your naive argumentations regarding that "what is out there" is the same than what we see).
Now, you state that I claim that "reality is immaterial", once again, you commit a strawman... and yet you DEMAND me to answer questions about what I HAVE NOT SAID!

Well. I can't.
What I
have said, is that reality is
OUTSIDE OUR CONCEPTS. That our concepts are ways to grab it, to describe it, and
nothing more.
Do you think any neuroscientist in the world would tell me that there was no world external to my own perception of it? Seriously?
Ask them. Of course your mileage will vary, but I would suggest you to read the opinions of those working with our visual system.
Put simply, here's my objection - you have yet to explain how multiple subjects can perceive the same object qua the same object if that object does not, in some objective sense, exist as an object in the world. I already asked you this
upthread, but you ignored it. I'm not surprised, frankly, because it seems that were you to try and answer it your "framework" would come apart at the seams.
Yeah, right. It should be clear by now, but I have to resort to crayons from time to time.
Where have I expressed that there is not an objective reality?
I have stated, again and again, that the cause of our perceptions is not in our phenomenological world. It lies outside of it, yet is its cause. Got it?
Materialism posits that the spoon is a material object, thus answering this question. How does your "framework" answer it?
Volatile, tell you what. Stop claiming that I have not explained something when you have been unable to understand the answer. Your admirer, Piggy, its like you, in the sense that he has not yet understood a thing, yet, at least you try to argue (and I respect that).
Now, the first days after I started the thread I was answering, point by point the counterarguments some members made. I believe you say you have read the whole thread, but I doubt it.
I have proved you wrong in your assumptions several times by now, you started by accusing me of solipsism

. You had the nerve then to claim that I was wrong when you were using a strawman! Please.
Since then, you have changed your view about what I'm stating several times, each of them accusing me of this and that and I have been showing you your errors.
But that doesn't work, you appeal to authority all the way, citing ideas that are not yours and trying to stand behind them, not a particularly impressive job.
In any case, I believe I have answered now. Take your time, and don't play strawmans if you want to argue.