Chucky
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Dec 28, 2009
- Messages
- 324
No. A law is an observed, general fact. The law of conservation of energy (energy is conserved), the law of gravity (mass attracts mass according to this equation), the 2nd law of thermodynamics (entropy increases), etc. A theory is a framework for explaining such facts. The theory of evolution explains how species change and diverge. The oxygen theory of combustion explains how fire occurs. The atomic theory of matter explains most chemistry.
There are no theories that explain -why- entropy increases or -why- energy is conserved. They just do.
A good point. Yet, isn't evolution a process whereby through repeated adaptations to changing environments simplicity leads to greater complexity? That strikes me as a potential law. The early universe evolved from pretty much hydrogen and helium into the periodic table we see today. From a hot, orderly state to one of increasing entropy. In fact, as a result of our evolution we now create elements that we do not see in nature.
Yes, there may be a framework by which we use theory to explain how stars and living things and computer programs, etc. evolve over time. But generally, I don't think the process reverses itself overall and is an ongoing phenomenon.