In which case, the answer is not so much as some.
As to wave/particle duality - it stands as a great example of the observer problem. What the observer sees depends on the observation made.
So does the uncertainty principle, by the way, stand as a great example. The observer can know momentum or location but not both.
Man is not the measure of God.
LOLOL.
By the grace of God for His glory.
For whether we live, we live unto the Lord; and whether we die, we die unto the Lord: whether we live therefore, or die, we are the Lord's." -- Romans 14:7-8"For none of us liveth to himself, and no man dieth to himself.
The spell checker doesn't see the error...mortal, in context, of course. Did you have to ask, or does context not matter to you?
As to quoting you, the quote was accurate and a great opportunity to praise God!
It was accurate, but out of context, an excerpt cherry-picked for desired effect.
As to wave/particle duality - it stands as a great example of the observer problem. What the observer sees depends on the observation made
The observer problem exists inwardly as well as outwardly. Inward "observations" can be just as relative and misleading as those outwardly ones.
So does the uncertainty principle, by the way, stand as a great example. The observer can know momentum or location but not both
Very good! These wave/particle issues simply tell us what every honest scientist should be able to admit: we do not know the true nature of light or electrons or gravity or anything for that matter. What we know is what we discover through our working models.
Just as a spiritual person should be able to admit that we do not know God as He really is, and that what we know of Him is through our "spiritual" working models.
In either case, we have limited human working models.