(April 5, 2019 at 5:58 pm)Macoleco Wrote: Take the duality of light for example. We created 2 models (waves and photons) of this phenomenon. Not because the light actually behaves differently depending on the situation, but because the models complement each other, meaning that they are incomplete individually.
It's even worse than that. Light in fact DOESN'T behave differently as it passes through a double slit. It remains in an ambiguous state called "superposition" which means it's both and neither. It's when an observer interacts with it that it settles on which form it took. Take the quantum eraser effect: