“…Hobson and Friston (2014, p. 22) boldly assert that consciousness "is not a hard thing to understand, describe, or make hypotheses aboutif one associates it with inference based on deeply structured hierarchical (probabilistic) beliefs about sensations"; Wiese and Metzinger (2017, p. 2) claim that if the PP theory is on the right track, "it may provide the means to build new conceptual bridges between theoretical and empirical work on cognition and consciousness"; Clark, Friston and Wilkinson that their version of the PP story attempts to "lay the groundwork for a substantive, but revisionary, account of consciousness itself" (Clark et al, 2019, p. 20);and Drayson (2017, p. 8) that on the PP approach, "conscious perceptual experience is the product of the entire prediction minimization process: it is determined by the interactions between top-down and bottom-up information flow within the entire hierarchy". Perhaps most significantly, Doerig et al (2020) include PP theory in their list of most influential currently debated theories of consciousness. Assessing the extent to which consciousness is systematically related to the explanatory moves of a PP theory, the central task of this paper, thus seems to be a worthwile exercise.…”