Flipper
New member
PureX:
Yup. Furthermore, if you subscribe to the classical theory of general relativity, then at singularities (as postulated at the heart of a black hole, or even at the beginning of the universe itself - not so fashionable any more, this latter one), then most of the laws of physics break down.
But you don't have to go to such extremes to violate natural law as we have codified it.
Newton's laws are excellent until you reach ultra-high velocities, then they break down and the laws of General Relativity are more applicable.
And, if singularities really exist, then Einstein's laws break down too, leaving us with, possibly, the laws of Quantum Gravity, the result of the marriage between relativity and quantum mechanics. Oddly enough, these laws may govern the property of "Quantum foam", that speculative material that may lie beyond the Planck length, filling the smallest possible space.
Additionally, all physical laws were disrupted from 10^-10 to 10^-40 seconds during the Big Bang as the four universal forces unified. Before 10^-40, Quantum Gravity once again rules.
It seems then, that "natural laws" were made to be broken.
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Originally posted by novice Matter and energy ALWAYS (without exception) conform to natural laws.
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That's the straw man, right there. First of all we don't know that "natural laws" don't change. Secondly, we don't know that matter and energy always conform to these natural laws, and third, we have very little actually knowledge of natural law, and we may NEVER have full knowledge of them. So basically, almost anything is still possible regarding "natural law".
Yup. Furthermore, if you subscribe to the classical theory of general relativity, then at singularities (as postulated at the heart of a black hole, or even at the beginning of the universe itself - not so fashionable any more, this latter one), then most of the laws of physics break down.
But you don't have to go to such extremes to violate natural law as we have codified it.
Newton's laws are excellent until you reach ultra-high velocities, then they break down and the laws of General Relativity are more applicable.
And, if singularities really exist, then Einstein's laws break down too, leaving us with, possibly, the laws of Quantum Gravity, the result of the marriage between relativity and quantum mechanics. Oddly enough, these laws may govern the property of "Quantum foam", that speculative material that may lie beyond the Planck length, filling the smallest possible space.
Additionally, all physical laws were disrupted from 10^-10 to 10^-40 seconds during the Big Bang as the four universal forces unified. Before 10^-40, Quantum Gravity once again rules.
It seems then, that "natural laws" were made to be broken.