Aw, I thought you were above falling into that trap. It doesn't matter whether it agrees with your philosophy or not, QM is very, very good at what it does. Heisenberg's uncertainty principle is confirmed, so are the quantized orbitals of electrons in atoms. Quantum Mechanics may be so unintuitive that they say that if you think you understand it you don't, but its predictions have been so astonishingly accurate that even the physicists who were dead set against the idea all had to admit it was real, no matter how badly they wanted the universe to be deterministic.
Still, he is right in that the "hidden variable" theory is viable. It just
might still be deterministic. There's no evidence for it, but that's why he calls it a philosophy
And well, I kind of lean that way as well. The thing is, with everything I learned of Physics, every single topic clicks into place in my mind (eventually
). Except QM. That one, as you pointed out, fails to click in most people. As most physics does, and this one single theory (set of theories) doesn't, it's the odd one out, and it's the only one (or maybe just the first one) that's counter-intuitive.
Or we have just reached the maximum of our understanding, and our brains are incapable of completely grasping anything deeper than this.