Science doesn’t care what you believe. As others note above the wave-particle behavior of light is a demonstrable fact not something you need to believe in and not something that will change at all depending on whether or not you believe in it.
@luigirovatti What your experience of this phenomenon tells you is that our human senses are not equipped to see/know what is going on. We just didn’t evolve to perceive that kind of thing. This sort of thing is a good example of how important and clever tools are that humans use to “see” things that we cannot see without them.
Most of quantum mechanics is like that, counter-intuitive or incomprehensible, but we rely on what has been discovered about quantum mechanics every day (e.g. all our computing gadgets with transistors in them).
Several scientists discuss, regarding ‘extra’ dimensions, that it is likely there are all kinds of phenomena happening in those extra dimensions all around us all the time but we are physically equipped to know about only the usual three and a half dimensions of our normal consensus reality (3D plus time).