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What are the laws of nature???
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Laws of nature in Physics..... No coordination.
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The laws of nature :-
Gravitation,Matter and Light.All interactions in the universe are governed by four fundamental forces.On the large scale,the forces of Gravitation and Electromagestim rule,while the strong and weak forces dominate the microscopic realm of the atomic nucleus.
Gravitation,Matter and Light.All interactions in the universe are governed by four fundamental forces.On the large scale,the forces of Gravitation and Electromagestim rule,while the strong and weak forces dominate the microscopic realm of the atomic nucleus.
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Law of nature, in the philosophy of science, a stated regularity in the relations or order of phenomena in the world that holds, under a stipulated set of conditions, either universally or in a stated proportion of instances. (The notion is distinct from that of a natural law—i.e., a law of right or justice supposedly derived from nature.)
Laws of nature are of two basic forms: (1) a law is universal if it states that some conditions, so far as are known, invariably are found together with certain other conditions; and (2) a law is probabilistic if it affirms that, on the average, a stated fraction of cases displaying a given condition will display a certain other condition as well. In either case, a law may be valid even though it obtains only under special circumstances or as a convenient approximation. Moreover, a law of nature has no logical necessity; rather, it rests directly or indirectly upon the evidence of experience.
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^_^ #HelløBuddY ^_^
••#aNsWeR ↓↓↓
Law of nature, in the philosophy of science, a stated regularity in the relations or order of phenomena in the world that holds, under a stipulated set of conditions, either universally or in a stated proportion of instances. (The notion is distinct from that of a natural law—i.e., a law of right or justice supposedly derived from nature.)
Laws of nature are of two basic forms: (1) a law is universal if it states that some conditions, so far as are known, invariably are found together with certain other conditions; and (2) a law is probabilistic if it affirms that, on the average, a stated fraction of cases displaying a given condition will display a certain other condition as well. In either case, a law may be valid even though it obtains only under special circumstances or as a convenient approximation. Moreover, a law of nature has no logical necessity; rather, it rests directly or indirectly upon the evidence of experience.
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