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Why can we see objects in light, but not in the absense of light?

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I'm reading QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter by Feynman right now and you are all wrong. What happens is that light particles hit the apple and this sets this little arrow thing spinning and where it stops signals the probability that the light will be vectorized or not and then the light gets converted to an electron but not really and for in ignosecond exists everywhere at all times at once and then gets tossed back out at just the very same spot it disappeared so you can't tell that it was gone but the dudes who study this stuff (psychics) can because they are smarter than you and then the light comes flinging back out and, oh wait, first the light uses the Pythagorean theorem to figure out the square of the probability that it should go somewhere like you eye, then it goes there so you see it.
 
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