durangodawood
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- Aug 28, 2007
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1. Yes, of course we can quantify the effect of gravity in reliable ways.The gravitational acceleration of 9.8 m/s/s. would be the same whether or not we could describe it or not, whether we could put it into numerical symbolism or not. Yes, we put the labels in numerical symbolism on the observation but it is a reality and consistently holds whether or not we observe it. Gravity's behavior that something that free falls accelerates at 9.8 m/s/s is the law that we describe and observe. It is the reality...it is the "law" of gravity that governs how objects will fall all the time, anywhere, whether light or heavy.
What exceptions?
Why are they termed as laws? If the natural phenomena of the behavior obeying certain principles or dictates universally, consistently and proven by millions of experiments was labeled something else what would it be labeled and why? We label in accordance with the language that that is agreed upon no matter what language or culture observes it. Law is something that one is suppose to obey, the laws of nature obey...we obey the laws of nature. Can we violate any of the natural laws that we describe? Can we free fall at a different rate than 9.8 m/s/s? Can we violate the speed of light? If a human is unable to violate or alter any "law" it is truly a law and not just a description labeled a law.
This is something you believe and no one can show us they don't. WE have no reason or no reason has been discovered or proven why the universe is governed by the laws of physics, why there is this order that applies to every avenue we experience...Biology, Chemistry, Geology, Cosmology and so on?
2. Exceptions to predictability: radioactive decay. Individual decay instances are fundamentally not predictable as far as we know. There may be other examples.
3. I think we call our model-making "laws" because of our inherited presumption that there is a law-giver. So the idea of "laws" is sensible in that context. But scientifically speaking, that context is a presumption.
4. Correct, we cant make matter/energy behave in a way that it cannot behave.
5. If by "law" you mean an unalterable truth we observe about how matter behaves, then, ok, there's "law". But if you mean a rule that has any sort of existence of its own, then no. You cant show that.
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