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Riddle: how can one thing act like a wave and a particle, and only “decide” when you look?
The helpful answer starts small: “wave” means a spread-out set of chances, not a wobbly little object hiding in space.
“Particle” shows up when something makes a single mark, like one click in a detector; the click is a real event, not a blurry half-click.
So quantum theory is not saying nature is confused; it is saying your question matters, because different experiments force different kinds of answers.
Measurement is not magic eyesight; it is an interaction that ties the system to a big, noisy world, where delicate overlaps stop behaving like one smooth wave.
That is why “which path?” kills the interference pattern: the information is no longer allowed to stay soft and shared across possibilities.
Ultimate takeaway: quantum physics is less about what things “are” in private, and more about what the world lets you know through the tests you can actually run.
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