Jeffrey, Sheri, All,
Jeffrey, yes I appreciate that the particle is only affirmed once it is measured. But it seems to me that underlying all this is an assuming that the particle already exists. Otherwise why would there be an experiment to measure it. It seems to me that the observer (which is the assuming of a particle) is operating during the measuring (observed) and even in the designing of the experiment. And even waves are an approximation it seems to me, again, based on our experiencing and approximations that flow from this. We gotta go with something, but I wonder the degree to which our experiencing and formulations are determining what we measure, interpret and so on. It seems like it can be self-reinforcing process, worth appreciating perhaps. So then how we are looking and formulating are not held in such a concrete way..... For example, a particle is assumed to exist independently of its environment. Is this true, or is it actually its very environment, not separate from it? In seeing this, the whole framework for formulating and interpreting the experiment is affected.
Sheri, yes, to me "the observer is the observed" is a framing or pointing to something that may actually happen, ongoingly. We tend to assume our seeing is absolute instead of realizing that how or from where we are looking at everything affects what we see. There is an "observing" or measuring or interpreting or translating happening, that might not involve any fixed entity. It is a happening or experiencing taking place that is not conceptual, but moves in concepts.
This very thing is operating right here and now as I write this. There are so many influences operating in how things are coming up and being expressed now. I can't possibly take all these influences in, just appreciate this is the case. Something totally unexpected might suddenly come in, who knows. What I sense is the noticing of assumings operating, which may open into something unexpected..... -Dan
-Dan