What is a Law of Nature?
Edward Feser
Edward Feser
Quote:But what exactly is a law of nature? Hawking and Mlodinow characterize a law as “a rule that is based upon an observed regularity and provides predictions that go beyond the immediate situations upon which it is based.”[2] Here too their position is no doubt a common one. But their answer is not terribly informative, because the terms “law” and “rule” are often used synonymously. Suppose you asked a political philosopher what liberty is and he told you that liberty is freedom. You would probably respond: “Yes, I already know that much, because the terms are more or less interchangeable. I wasn’t asking you for a synonym, though. I want to know the nature of the thing that the words ‘liberty’ and ‘freedom’ refer to.” In the same way, since the words “law” and “rule” are often used interchangeably, it isn’t very helpful to say that a physical law is a kind of rule. What we need to know is the nature of the laws or rules that are said to govern the physical world.
To be sure, Hawking and Mlodinow do say more than merely that a law of nature is a kind of rule. Again, they tell us that laws are inferred from observed regularities, and that we can derive predictions from them. They also tell us that “in modern science laws of nature are usually phrased in mathematics,” and that “they must have been observed to hold without exception… at least under a stipulated set of conditions.”[3] And they tell us that physical laws are “consistent principles,” in contrast with the arbitrary and “inscrutable” whims of the gods in terms of which pre-scientific cultures explain natural phenomena.[4]
But while somewhat informative, even these remarks still don’t really answer our question. Suppose you asked a geometer what a triangle is, and he told you that in Euclidean geometry the angles of a triangle summed to 180 degrees, that you could discover various features of triangles by constructing proofs, and so on. All of that is true, but it doesn’t really answer your question....
'Historically, we may regard materialism as a system of dogma set up to combat orthodox dogma...Accordingly we find that, as ancient orthodoxies disintegrate, materialism more and more gives way to scepticism.'
- Bertrand Russell
- Bertrand Russell