A scientific law describes a consistent pattern or relationship observed in nature, while a scientific theory explains why and how that pattern or relationship occurs. Laws are generally more specific and precise, providing a mathematical description, while theories are broader explanations based on evidence and experimentation.
A theory and a law serve different purposes in science. A theory explains why something happens based on evidence and research, while a law describes a phenomenon or pattern observed in nature without necessarily explaining why it occurs. Therefore, a theory cannot "become" a law because they are fundamentally different in terms of their function and scope.
A scientific law is the description of a recurring event that occurs in nature. A scientific theory is an explanation of the law. The law does not change, but the theory may change when new data indicate that it needs to.
A theory that has been confirmed through rigorous testing and observation is typically referred to as a scientific law.
A scientific theory is an explanation supported by evidence and can be modified as new evidence is discovered. A scientific law is a description of a natural phenomenon that is consistent and often expressed mathematically, without explaining why it happens.
You're playing with words ... a "law" is just a thumb nail description of a theory.
A scientific theory is a hypothesis that has been supported by much research, and is able to explain a wide variety of observations. During the process of formulating a theory, a hypothesis is refined as experiments yield new information. The purpose of a theory is to explain a scientific law.
A scientific theory is a hypothesis that has been supported by much research, and is able to explain a wide variety of observations. During the process of formulating a theory, a hypothesis is refined as experiments yield new information. The purpose of a theory is to explain a scientific law.
A theory is just an idea of how things work a law is a theory already proven that applies anywhere just depending of the variables used in the law
Because they differ
A scintific law is a statement that describes what scientisis expect to happen. A scintififc theory is a well-tested explantion for a range of observations. This answers the question '' How Does Scientific Law Differ From Scientific Theroy?''
It refers to the legal rules and regulations in a particular locality. Which often differ
because i a theory is someones idea of what happend, that is debaitable with many diffrent ideas. but a scientific law is what is it.
he was wrong
command of sovereign sanctioned by punishments is law by imperative theory and law as legal science of norms is by pure theory of law.
A theory, when proven over time, can become a law. Example: Law of Gravity and Theory of Evolution
A scientific law is a statement that describes what scientists expect to happen every time under a particular set of conditions. Unlike a theory, a scientific law describes an observed pattern without attempting to explain it.
how does a theory differ from an inference