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A theory is an explanation of behavior, while a law is a summary of observed, measurable behavior.
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A scientific theory is accepted as factual even though it hasn't been proven. A scientific law has been proven as fact.
A scientific law is something that has been proved again and again under experimentation, and is always true. A scientific theory is an educated guess made based off of a group of data that is not proven to be true. For example, Newton's Laws are scientific laws since they have been proven to be always true. The theory of gravity is a scientific theory because gravity itself has not been completely proven to exist.
A theory, when proven over time, can become a law. Example: Law of Gravity and Theory of Evolution
By not doing nothing
A theory is an explanation of behavior, while a law is a summary of observed, measurable behavior.
By not doing nothing
By not doing nothing
By not doing nothing
A scientific theory is accepted as factual even though it hasn't been proven. A scientific law has been proven as fact.
They're the same thing, but (usually) the "law" has an equation associated with it, while the "theory" is just a (verbal) discription.
A theory is consistent and has known experiment results, but is often refined as new knowledge is found. A law is a mathematical relationship which has been found to be consistently true.
A scientific law is something that has been proved again and again under experimentation, and is always true. A scientific theory is an educated guess made based off of a group of data that is not proven to be true. For example, Newton's Laws are scientific laws since they have been proven to be always true. The theory of gravity is a scientific theory because gravity itself has not been completely proven to exist.
I would think that it is a law since it is a fact
The Stakeholder's theory in Ethics.
Differentiate or compare theory from law