Outside of pure mathematics, stating that things are absolutely impossible is considered un-scientific by many. Nevertheless, the term is commonly used to describe those things which absolutely cannot occur within the context of our current formulation of physical laws.
In other words, so long as the laws of physics (not simply the current understanding of them, but the actual laws, which may still be undiscovered) and the various physical constants remain invariant over time — so long as the laws of the universe are fixed — then the conservation laws must be true, in the sense that they follow from the presupposition using mathematical logic.
Now here is a revolutionary thought ... To put it the other way around: if perpetual motion machines were possible, then most of what we believe to be true about physics, mathematics, or both would have to be false. .. and that is what you are afraid of...
In other words, so long as the laws of physics (not simply the current understanding of them, but the actual laws, which may still be undiscovered) and the various physical constants remain invariant over time — so long as the laws of the universe are fixed — then the conservation laws must be true, in the sense that they follow from the presupposition using mathematical logic.
Now here is a revolutionary thought ... To put it the other way around: if perpetual motion machines were possible, then most of what we believe to be true about physics, mathematics, or both would have to be false. .. and that is what you are afraid of...
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