It seems pretty obvious to me that if (1) if a species of bacteria lives in an extremely uniform / homogeneous / stable external environment, it will eventually evolve to not have any machinery capable of observing and learning about its external environment; (2) such a bacterium would still be doing lots of complex homeostasis stuff, reproduction, etc., such that it would be pretty weird to say that these bacteria have fallen outside the scope of Active Inference theory. (I.e., my impression was that the foundational assumptions / axioms of Free Energy Principle / Active Inference were basically just homeostasis and bodily integrity, and this hypothetical bacterium would still have both of those things.) (Disclosure: I’m an Active Inference skeptic.)
It seems pretty obvious to me that if (1) if a species of bacteria lives in an extremely uniform / homogeneous / stable external environment, it will eventually evolve to not have any machinery capable of observing and learning about its external environment; (2) such a bacterium would still be doing lots of complex homeostasis stuff, reproduction, etc., such that it would be pretty weird to say that these bacteria have fallen outside the scope of Active Inference theory. (I.e., my impression was that the foundational assumptions / axioms of Free Energy Principle / Active Inference were basically just homeostasis and bodily integrity, and this hypothetical bacterium would still have both of those things.) (Disclosure: I’m an Active Inference skeptic.)