The Certainty of the Uncertainty Principle
You lack an understanding of what uncertainty means in quantum physics. It doesn't mean we know nothing whatsoever, it means we can't be 100% certain of the things we measure. I suppose you think the computer you used to type your OP works on a complete fluke, and that the quantum physicists who invented its components lucked out. We can be just as certain of what physics says as we can be that you started this thread. Nice try though.
You are so right: I am the ultimate idiot because I am utterly CERTAIN that by far the most certain thing Physics has is its Uncertainty Principle.
I am an idiot because I am certain that if Light has no time to travel then nothing else can have time to travel, or do anything else.
I am also an even better idiot because I understand why the Observer determines the observation... which means that what he observes has nothing to do with his Observation.
I am also an even better Idiot because if the Observer is always at the center of the expanding Universe then he also has to be at its leading edge, and also everywhere else in the Universe.
But my stupidity has no limits because I am utterly certain that PHYSICS is screaming that if I am ALWAYS everywhere in the Universe then I must be the Universe ... and, EXACTLY like a dream, the separation of my body from the rest of the Universe/dream is pure fiction.
And then some: I am utterly Certain that Physics' Unified Field is just the Quantum Gap, that is the Hindu Atman/Samadhi, that in simple English is just the present, Now.
But it takes this monumental stupidity of mine to understand that the Universe's missing/hidden Black Holes and Dark Matter is so simple to understand that it is not only funny -- but the Supreme Comedy: the most Universally certain thing Physics can give us is its Uncertainty Principle.
-- Wreally Reality