The physicist Lee Smolin thinks that physics, its laws, and constants evolve: https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/troublemaker-lee-smolin-says-physics-8211-and-its-laws-8211-must-evolve/ — Fooloso4
But apparently the known laws of physics (regularities) have been stable for billions of years. — litewave
Later physical theories consist of better, more comprehensive, less ad hoc explanations than earlier physical theories. From this comes more precise predictions — 180 Proof
As far as we know the "constants" are constant (our physics breaks down at various edge cases already mentioned), but I agree insofar as better explanations, not merely more precise descriptions, have been found. — 180 Proof
I guess physicists have a lot of evidence that points to the stability of the known laws? — litewave
Smolin has a theory of cosmological natural selection in which the laws or constants may change when a new universe is born from a black hole in the preceding universe. So if I understand him right, he doesn't propose that such a change has happened in our universe since it was born. — litewave
https://www.edge.org/conversation/lee_smolin-think-about-natureThe conclusions that I come to, I think they're not subtle, they're easy to list, are first that—and I was opening with them before, the method of physics with fixed laws—which are given for all time, acting on fixed spaces of states which are given for all time is self-limiting. The picture of atoms with timeless properties moving around in a void according to timeless laws, this is self-limiting. It's the right thing to do when we're discussing small parts of the universe, but it breaks down when you apply it to the whole universe or when your chain of explanation gets too deep.
The third conclusion is that time therefore must be fundamental. Time must go all the way down. It must not be emergent, it must not be an approximate phenomenon, it must not be an illusion.
why do causal relations ("the constant conjunction between causes and effects", as Hume put it) persist in time? — litewave
So if our sciences didn't do this, we would not experience the apple as falling down every time we drop it? — litewave
the regularity would still exist even if we took our blinders off and the question would remain why the regularity persists. — litewave
This is a feature of law-making, law-devising or law-discovering rather than necessarily a feature of laws. — Cuthbert
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