Science considering experimental influence of the observer

[quote=“lausten, post:17, topic:7932”]
In other words, we can’t know what’s going on in those tiny particles because when we measure them, it changes what’s going on.

So, it’s pretty much regular Newtonian physics causing this.

That sounds as if the observer is projecting something that causes the interference…

I could understand that when a light wave hits the eye the wave function collapses and that wave is observed as a particle in the eye. I cannot imagine that observation would have any effect on the emitter of the lightwave.

Else one could make a case that if you look at a red rose long enough it will turn white and that is simply not true.