Do I understand that in your opinion this is a flawed narrative?
No, it's just one narrative. I make no judgement.
How can an image be non dual? The image, necessarily will have an original. No? Or, I do not understand what you are saying?
I apologize if my terminology throws you.
The narrative for each of us forms our story, the full-spectrum image in which we 'are' (alive). An understanding, if you like. We experience the world in takes, our memory (like a camera) taking bits and impressions, sensations and comprehensions, judgements and decisions--and mistakes (the missed 'takes')--all which inform an ontological image of what the world is, one image that we fall back on repeatedly as the truth, in order to move ahead. That's how paradigm shifts are possible, the foundational image can be altered.
For the dual ontology, the image is 'mind,' and allowably the original (since the 'real' world cannot be known). This is the mindset that invented science, methodical means to investigate the unknown inner workings of a world that lies 'outside the mind.' For the non-dual ontology, mind does not differ from the world. There is only the image, only the original. There is only "just me," which is the world.
I will take time to process and understand this. At this stage, I will ask what of this is objectively or subjectively provable? Can you provide a few key points that can be tested -- objectively or subjectively?
'Objective' and 'subjective' are inherently part of the narrative, as they are simply descriptors that place things in the narrative. The words are applicable to truth, so depending on one's ontological image, they will be used differently to
place truth. Objective means "of truth," and subjective refers to a perspective on truth.
The dual ontological image places truth firmly in the world. It invests in 'objective' meaning 'outside the mind.' This belief creates the divide between mind and the world. The alternative is that there is just the world, the composite image available to each of us.
I offer no proof, just a story.