This paper presents a conceptually economical reinterpretation of wave–particle duality, framing it as a consequence of dimensional projection rather than as a fundamental ontological dualism or an observer-induced collapse. Quantum systems are treated as evolving continuously within a space of effective informational degrees of freedom, while particle-like behavior emerges from restricted lower-dimensional access and irreversible recording. By reclassifying classic experiments—such as double-slit interference, delayed-choice setups, quantum erasers, and automated detection—under this framework, the work highlights that their empirically observed continuous behaviors are more naturally explained by projection and information restriction than by abrupt state reduction. Beyond reinterpretation, the paper introduces a falsifiable experimental criterion—the Dimensional Projection Test (DPT)—which distinguishes projection-based, no-collapse descriptions from genuine collapse models. The DPT predicts a smooth degradation of interference visibility under continuously tuned coupling, whereas any sharp transition would signal objective collapse dynamics. Positioned as complementary to existing collapse-model bounds rather than a competing formalism, the DPT provides an operational lens through which foundational ambiguities can be tested experimentally. Overall, the work clarifies long-standing conceptual confusion without modifying quantum mechanics, offering a disciplined, test-oriented contribution to quantum foundations. Reality does not change when we stop observing; only our access does.
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Uthraa Murali
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Uthraa Murali (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69731089c8125b09b0d20472 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18323206