Physics, asked by kamaljitsinghguri, 4 months ago

Does Nature follow laws?/ ​

Answers

Answered by blackbangtan7866
2

Answer:

Science includes many principles at least once thought to be laws of nature: Newton's law of gravitation, his three laws of motion, the ideal gas laws, Mendel's laws, the laws of supply and demand, and so on. Other regularities important to science were not thought to have this status

Explanation:

have a purplistic day ^_^

Answered by INFLD
5

Answer:

Nature seems to “obey laws” because people confuse natural laws with laws enacted by humans.

Laws enacted by humans are proactive requirements to act in a certain way, often with a specified punishment for not acting in that way. As such, when we talk about somebody following one of these laws, there’s a degree of choice and intelligence evident on the part of the person following those laws.

Natural laws, however, are merely descriptive. They are simply our descriptions of the ways in which we have observed things in nature acting. These laws don’t tell nature how to behave and nothing is forcing nature to follow those laws — they just describe how we think nature behaves. And if we later find out that nature doesn’t always behave the way we think it does, then we rewrite the laws to match reality.

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