The Hard Problem of Consciousness & the Fundamental Abstraction
Qualia and reductionism
The problem can be solved quite simply by
1. Depicting the difference between life and inanimate nature
2. Realize that subjective experience from the first person perspective cannot be scientifically investigated
To 1. Life is already a structural concept and life is structure in that it can only be explained by the interaction of 'dead' building blocks. When we speak of life, we mean a system and not individual elements, because life is not represented in any single element.
However, physics only describes 'dead' matter, i.e. individual elements, so it cannot describe life with its rules. Trying to reduce life to physics must therefore fail. This applies not only to life in general, but to all expressions of life, including consciousness. Consciousness is a property of the individual, more precisely, of the brain.
Biologically, consciousness can be described as the orientation performance of a (central nervous) living being.
So whoever tries to explain consciousness physically commits a category error.
To 2. Consciousness is thinking and feeling, in general: experiencing. You can observe and measure this from the outside, you can experience it from the inside. But this experience is subjective. Nobody can feel my pain, it's my own pain and therefore you can't objectify it except by means of statistical correlations, but that's something completely different.
Conclusion: the hard problem of consciousness is a chimera! See:
dr-stegemann.de