• In philosophy and science, laws are proposed to explain the regularities observed in the universe.
  • Physical laws are considered highly universal and generally apply irrespective of time or place.
  • Biological laws often have a more contingent status than physical laws, as they can be subject to more exceptions due to the complexity and variability of biological systems.
  • Economic laws are generally considered models or approximations of reality, heavily dependent on assumptions about rational behavior and market conditions.
  • Social laws are often normative, suggesting how societies typically behave rather than describing an inevitable outcome.
  • The ontological status of these laws varies significantly from domain to domain.
  1. List the domains in which laws are posited, provide examples of alleged laws in that domain, and comment on the ontological status of the laws in each domain.
    1. Domains and Their Laws
      1. Physical Laws
      2. Biological Laws
      3. Economic Laws
      4. Social Laws
      5. Psychological Laws
      6. Summary
    2. Major Domains of Law
      1. Public Law
      2. Private Law
      3. Criminal Law
    3. Domains with Alleged Laws
  2. It appears that what we denote as laws in the hard and soft sciences is merely a perceived inductive regularity in observations. Is this correct?
    1. Inductive Regularity in Observations
      1. Induction in Science
      2. The Role of Observational Regularity
      3. Hard Sciences vs. Soft Sciences
      4. Philosophical Considerations
      5. Conclusion
  3. Provide historical cases in which laws that were once thought to be constant turned out to be wrong or riddled with exceptions.
    1. Historical Revisions of Scientific Laws
      1. Newtonian Mechanics
      2. Phlogiston Theory
      3. Miasma Theory of Disease
      4. Classical Elements
      5. Spontaneous Generation
      6. Conclusion
    2. Scientific Laws Once Thought Constant, Later Overturned
      1. Newtonian Laws of Motion and Gravity
      2. Rigid Body Rotation in Physics
      3. Boyle’s Law (Ideal Gas Law)
      4. Mendel’s Laws of Inheritance
      5. Evolutionary Theory and the Immutability of Species
      6. Economic Laws
  4. Discuss the human tendency to invoke terms such as law to imbue unjustified invariability into observed regularities.
    1. Human Tendency to Invoke “Laws”
      1. Psychological and Cognitive Foundations
      2. Historical and Philosophical Perspectives
      3. Social and Cultural Influences
      4. Implications and Criticisms
      5. Conclusion
  5. Create a 10-item quiz on the entire thread above.
    1. Quiz: Laws in Science and Philosophy
    2. Answers
    3. Quiz: Exploring Laws and Regularities
  6. Provide 15 discussion questions relevant to the content above.
    1. Discussion Prompts: Laws, Regularities, and Human Interpretation

List the domains in which laws are posited, provide examples of alleged laws in that domain, and comment on the ontological status of the laws in each domain.


It appears that what we denote as laws in the hard and soft sciences is merely a perceived inductive regularity in observations. Is this correct?


Provide historical cases in which laws that were once thought to be constant turned out to be wrong or riddled with exceptions.


Discuss the human tendency to invoke terms such as law to imbue unjustified invariability into observed regularities.


Create a 10-item quiz on the entire thread above.


Provide 15 discussion questions relevant to the content above.


  1. List the domains in which laws are posited, provide examples of alleged laws in that domain, and comment on the ontological status of the laws in each domain.
    1. Domains and Their Laws
      1. Physical Laws
      2. Biological Laws
      3. Economic Laws
      4. Social Laws
      5. Psychological Laws
      6. Summary
    2. Major Domains of Law
      1. Public Law
      2. Private Law
      3. Criminal Law
    3. Domains with Alleged Laws
  2. It appears that what we denote as laws in the hard and soft sciences is merely a perceived inductive regularity in observations. Is this correct?
    1. Inductive Regularity in Observations
      1. Induction in Science
      2. The Role of Observational Regularity
      3. Hard Sciences vs. Soft Sciences
      4. Philosophical Considerations
      5. Conclusion
  3. Provide historical cases in which laws that were once thought to be constant turned out to be wrong or riddled with exceptions.
    1. Historical Revisions of Scientific Laws
      1. Newtonian Mechanics
      2. Phlogiston Theory
      3. Miasma Theory of Disease
      4. Classical Elements
      5. Spontaneous Generation
      6. Conclusion
    2. Scientific Laws Once Thought Constant, Later Overturned
      1. Newtonian Laws of Motion and Gravity
      2. Rigid Body Rotation in Physics
      3. Boyle’s Law (Ideal Gas Law)
      4. Mendel’s Laws of Inheritance
      5. Evolutionary Theory and the Immutability of Species
      6. Economic Laws
  4. Discuss the human tendency to invoke terms such as law to imbue unjustified invariability into observed regularities.
    1. Human Tendency to Invoke “Laws”
      1. Psychological and Cognitive Foundations
      2. Historical and Philosophical Perspectives
      3. Social and Cultural Influences
      4. Implications and Criticisms
      5. Conclusion
  5. Create a 10-item quiz on the entire thread above.
    1. Quiz: Laws in Science and Philosophy
    2. Answers
    3. Quiz: Exploring Laws and Regularities
  6. Provide 15 discussion questions relevant to the content above.
    1. Discussion Prompts: Laws, Regularities, and Human Interpretation




Phil Stilwell

Phil picked up a BA in Philosophy a couple of decades ago. After his MA in Education, he took a 23-year break from reality in Tokyo. He occasionally teaches philosophy and critical thinking courses in university and industry. He is joined here by ChatGPT, GEMINI, CLAUDE, and occasionally Copilot, Perplexity, and Grok, his far more intelligent AI friends. The seven of them discuss and debate a wide variety of philosophical topics I think you’ll enjoy.

Phil curates the content and guides the discussion, primarily through questions. At times there are disagreements, and you may find the banter interesting.

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