All major religions introduce the idea of "the Unseen". How can quantum mechanics, as we have scratched its surface, help us better see this issue?
Scientists (like Einstein and Bohr) disagreed on the interpretation of quantum mechanics, however they agreed on the undisputed fact that we can never ever “see, measure or know" any thing precisely on the quantum level (uncertainty principle). This implies that there is a dark area covering part of my vision, a closed dark room in my house right in front of us, but we’ll never be able to really see what is inside no matter how wonderful and fascinating this inside. So, we are forced to believe in a whole unseen world without seeing anything in it except the door.

As far as our perception of reality, Bohr and Heisenberg believed that quantum mechanics is as good as it gets, that the picture of the world is actually foggy, and the electron does not really have a position unless we measure it. So measurement "creates" reality.

If I believe in all of that, then I have a big problem. I am a double standard person. How did I know that these results are actually for real, not probability manifestations? Because Bohr and Heisenberg assumed that the measuring device, human beings, etc… do
have a physical reality. But if the devices and human beings and everything else are nothing but a group of atoms. So how come when an atom is alone, measuring its position creates it, while when trillion atoms are packed together, their position creates a measurement. I am not as smart as Mr. Bohr or Mr. Heisenberg but if this is not a basic flaw, what is?