I doubt it, in science almost nothing is considered totally completely true 100% of the time. Laws really don't change because they have been proven and proven so much and there isn't any evidence to disprove it, so we can accept it as truth. So the answer is probably yes, but I think one could change if it was discovered that it was wrong (which isn't very likely)
The law is that no mass can be created or destroyed, but it can change form.
he discovered the universal law of gravitation
You can change from civil law court to a common law court by using the True recognition of the autonomy.
This law was discovered gradually, over time - not all at once. Gradually it was discovered that more and more types of energy could be converted one to another.
Robert Hooke discovered the law.
A scientific law means it is always, absolutely true. If it were found untrue, it would not be a law, just a theory.
That is false. The two are not directly related.
False - wrong law.
The one who discovered the Law Of Gravity is SIR ISAAC NEWTON
Boyle's Law
False.
The law of applied for states that bodies change in mass and proportional to the amount of force applied to it is false.