We also believe that science is the way forward for consciousness studies; the hard problem is a result of lack of knowledge. We anticipate that neuroscience will show that connected neural networks not only generate the model - a knowledge-rich, multisensory experience that comprises our perception of the world - but also provide our cognitive functions including memory, thought and emotion.
Any system that generates such a model would also be conscious, it just happens to be the case that brains do the job on this planet. We view the functionalist idea that an arrangement of tin cans could be conscious is ludicrous while the apparently plausible proposal that a computer with the right software would be sentient is wrong. Given the progress made in computer gaming and simulation capability, a realistic virtual world could obviously be constructed given sufficient technology but that virtual world is immersive and parasitic on the brain. The virtual reality model we espouse is not a computer simulation. The brain is not a computer running software that represents the world. Computational functionalism is false: nothing in or about a computer simulation could be conscious.
This camp agrees with the Updating Model of Self In The World camp that the brain generates a model of our environment (with us at the centre) which is normally kept in synchrony with changes in important aspects of the world (including our bodies). We disagree, however, with the idea that subjective awareness is what it is like to be the process of updating the model. Perception, like many processes in the brain, is not conscious: updating the model is no more conscious than fine control of movement.
This camp is not a subcamp under Material Property Dualism because we deny dualism. We believe there is one ontology, not two (the physical and the phenomenological). The world is composed of matter and forces, and the organisation of the matter varies across space and time. Some of it is disorganised, some is organised into inanimate objects such as rocks, some of it is organised into life forms, some of these life forms are conscious and some conscious life forms are self-aware agents.
My research leads me to propose that time is actually 2 dimensional. What devices like the brain do is expand the conventional point in time into the now of consciousness. This solves the binding problem. The hard problem is then to explain how they do this.