painted wolf
Grey Muzzle
Laws are simple descriptions (usually mathematical) of observable events. They do not make any statement about what causes the event, only describing how they happen. They also don't describe the entirety of the phenomena, only a portion of it under specific circumstances.Then were do laws come from?
The simplest hypothesis, the most complex hypotheses, theories, laws? Aren't they all conceptual models? Isnt pretty much every idea we have a conceptual model? Even an hypothesis can have numerous components, which in themselves are hypotheses. I do realize different disciplines use the terms slightly different. But Im not aware that any place theory above law in a hierarchy of complexity. As far as Ive previously been aware, the terms have always related to our confidence in the truth value of the model, not its complexity.
Thing at rest will stay at rest/thing in motion will stay in motion:
There are some laws that are not mathematical in nature, but again... they describe limited experimentally observable phenomena and say nothing about the mechanism behind the phenomena. (An example being: "Cells are the basic unit of life")
Universal gravitation says nothing about what causes gravity only how it happens. It also doesn't explain all of gravitation, which is why General Relativity and quantum mechanics were required.
Some laws in evolution include:
Hardy-Weinburg equilibrium
Mendel's laws of inheritance
Cellular basis for life
Theories unite several laws and describe the mechanism(s) that produces them. The theory of gravity explains where gravity comes from by uniting the laws of classical and quantum mechanics with General Relativity.
The theory of evolution unites several biological laws such as Mendel's laws of inheritance, Hardy-Wienburg and so on and proposes the mechanisms that drive these laws. Those mechanisms include; Natural Selection, Genetic Drift, Differential Mutation and so on.
No, a hypothesis is simply an idea you can test. It may lead to a law or a theory but not usually... usually they are just promoted to "working hypothesis" which is a generally accepted idea that is the grounds for further experimentation.My first question, where do laws come from? In your view, does an hypothesis go directly to law?
Most hypothesis are used to explore aspects of laws and theories and provide evidence to support or contradict them, but not the whole thing.
No, my understanding is based on what I learned while getting my biology degree and in discussions on the subject with other natural scientists, chemists and physicists.Is your view based on mathematics? That may be our disjunct. My understanding is based solely on observational science.
These are the generally accepted scientific uses of the terms, regardless of that discipline being mathematical or observational.
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