Well the point is that the distinctions between 'subjective' and 'objective' will be very unclear in the 'world' you have chosen to live in, when you willingly admit the notion of universally ubiquitous, disembodied, flowing consciousness, as being anything more that just a simple, everyday, pure belief.
I would have to disagree with you on this point. It really doesn't matter whether the physical world creates consciousness, or consciousness creates the physical world, the exact same rules would apply.
Why?
Because in order to be conscious one must be conscious of something. Even the concept of "
I am" requires a context in which to ground that concept. So along with "
I am" there must be a concept of what I am not. But consciousness can't simply create whatever it wants to, it can't just "
wish" things into existence. What it creates must be coherent. "C" must follow "B", must follow "A" and so on, otherwise all that you have is chaos. There would be no logical reason for anything, and consciousness, along with its supporting context would be torn apart by cognitive dissonance. So for consciousness to exist it must do so in a context that's coherent. Cause must precede effect, and the Principle of Sufficient Reason must apply. There must be rules that not even consciousness itself can violate, and therefore reality would end up looking exactly the same as it does now.
And it's not really a matter of consciousness creating reality, because consciousness can't exist without reality, and logically, it can't precede something that it can't exist without. So it must be that the two are inseparable, they emerge together, with neither one being the cause of the other, but rather each being different aspects of the same thing, consciousness.
So in the end, you really have no way of knowing if reality exists "
out there", or whether it's all in your mind. The two versions would look exactly the same.