Let's suppose you are right.The question remains what is it which is illuded and what is it that refuses to feel unreal.
But suppose you are wrong and still have to not only equate emergent with illusionary but now that list includes the non fundamental, the reducible, and the non constant. In what way are they illusionary. Do you see the issue with your reductionist approach and it's actual disrespect of concepts such as emergence.
Not quite sure where disrespect of emergence comes from, sometimes I think I need lessons in Vladish to get what you are saying. But moving on, consider the emergence of intelligence in a bee swarm. A one million neuron bee is not so smart; granted it may be somewhat smarter than your average creationist, but that aside, a million bee swarm can make much smarter decisions on finding a nest site than a single bee. Where exactly is that intelligence ? It is hard, if not impossible, to put a spatial location on the focus of that intelligence. Similarly, I find it difficult to identify a spatial location for my self. Do I know always know the exact location and circumstances of every decision made ?
I was just reading about the eye fluke Diplostomum pseudospathaceum, which for part of its life cycle lives as a parasite inside the eyeball of freshwater fish, from where, somehow, it controls the behaviour of the fish, altering it such that the fish is more easily predated which enables the fluke to get into its next host. From what we have come to understand from cognitive research, I would bet that the fish does not know it is being controlled, it is probably unaware it is hosting a parasite, yet its choices are altered to suit the parasite. Human persons too are not just vastly complex organisms, we are walking ecosystems of bacteria, viruses and parasites and all these symbiotic flora feed into our thoughts and influence our moods, so when 'we' make a decision, it is not just a question of competing neuronal assemblies, rather it is a composite decision of billions of intimately interacting organisms, a wisdom of crowds in a sense. So when I make a decision, what exactly is its provenance and its location ? What the research suggests, is that rather like the poor river trout, unaware of the provenance of its decisions, we too are somewhat in the grip of a bigger population, unaware of the incalculable goings on below the level of our consciousness, but our conscious self is a cerebral mechanism for claiming ownership and responsibility for those decisions, and this is a profoundly important plank of personhood; it is not just about a continuity of identity that transcends the constant turnover of bodily cells, it is also about the feeling of ownership and control over decisions that arise out of this great big working biological system. This is why I think we have a conscious self, it is about empowerment at the level of the entire system.