When it comes to Round Earth and QM equivalences, I see it quite a bit like that people could see that it
looked round, if they were sailors[1] or had other advantageous positions[2]. But without the knowledge of gravity or some other form of "Earth sucks!" theory, there just wasn't the means to justify in the face of the 'authority' that says the whole place is flat and might not look too kindly on anyone making a big noise about it being otherwise.
(As an aside, a bit of an analogy, A long time ago, I was in a role-playing game where our group were asked by the local NPC king-type person to, for his entertainment, argue something obviously preposterous: i.e. that the world wasn't flat, but curved... Taking the challenge with relish (it was my University's role-playing society, we were all essentially geeky in one way or another), we managed to put forward a convincing argument that it was curved...
upwards, i.e. we're inside a sphere... even explaining the horizon-effect. Chuck enough words at it (the irony of my stating that is not lost on me!) and an argument can be made for almost anything. Words alone don't make it true.)
But I depart a little bit. I've no problem with QM being a good description of the world. Much as pre-QM ideas were a good description of the world until we started to look a lot closer at things. Waves as superposition of particles, etc, is indeed strange to our macroscopic selves, but I've got no problem with that as a "Lies To Children"[4] intermediate explanation. The fact that QM has an apparent "spooky action at a distance" that doesn't mesh with relativity's requirement that information not exceed the speed of light[3] means that there are obvious problems with each theory within the others' realm. As and when something arises (or develops and comes to dominate, out of the current crop of hopefuls) that encompasses all these things, then the majority of scientists who work at that level will formally deal with QM and Relativity as the Lies To Children explanations for something that they have a better explanation of, but which is beyond most people's understanding/need-to-know/willingness-to-understand.
So I'll happily (well, without undue complaint, except that I'm probably a bit rusty with it) work with the maths needed to describe superimposed states, etc, etc. It works (FCVO...) but I just 'feel' (as close to any faith position I have) that this is an abstraction on what is
really happening.
And I subscribe to the idea that's highly related to Gödel's first incompleteness theorem, insofar as
at some level we will no longer have the power
within our own universe to provably describe the exact nature of our own universe. We already have Planck-limit obfuscation of the exact details and workings of the quantum (/sub-quantum?) world, which might well be the actual Gödel-limit of our universe-system, or just a precursor symptom of it if we do get the equivalent of Star Trek's "Heisenburg Compensators" at any point in our future scientific endeavours.
Which is all far too speculative, I know. (And if I actually am right, I could never even prove I'm I'm right, thanks to that which Gödel describes... Right?
)
So, I take QM as a good explanation. I'm not by any means saying that I don't believe it's that complicated and that its all Newtonian down there. It's probably far more hard to understand[6]. Ditto I'm happy with the current understanding of the macroscopic Relativity (although I may have some unconventional ideas about black holes, they are just 'ideas', anyway, not something I'd say must be true...) and happy to work with roots of v-squared over c-squared, etc, if F=ma and all derived formulae aren't sufficient for a given situation.
Levels upon levels. Wheels within wheels. Possibly bunkum upon bunkum, I'll allow...
[1] Who could quite clearly see from the rigging that there was an 'over' component to the horizon, that ships happily travel over and back without reporting any problems, and even that the land itself retreated that way when they were going far enough away from it on clear days...
[2] Both geographical and perhaps in society, so they had time to look around, rather than tend fields, blah-de-blah... But those whose were in top positions but had heads (or the heads of their advisers) that were stuck in books that said how the world was flat would also be excluded.
[3] (Einstein, via Tesla, et al, having also coming up with a theory that explained things (some not yet confirmed!) that previous theories couldn't or wouldn't...
[4] A phrase pinched from Jack Cohen and and Ian Stewart. Basically it's like explaining electricity as like a flow of liquid (because it's easy to visualise) before you say "actually, it's this tiny particles called electrons" which is less so and requires at least some knowledge about the nature of atoms[5], and then later you learn that it's actually the
gaps where electrons aren't that move, and then later on... YGTI.
[5] Another "Lie To Children": It's the smallest particle. Well, it isn't, there are Protons and Neutrons at the centre and electrons going round that like planets in a a solar system. Well, not quite because [there are quarks and shit|the electrons form a cloud|you need to start explaining Quantum anyway]... etc. Each level is useful as an abstraction, even to those that know and understand levels below. As long as they understand the limitations.
[6] Although, being more fundamental and closer to The Truth, probably a lot more simple in and of itself. Harder to pin down, of course.