Submitted:
21 May 2026
Posted:
22 May 2026
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. The Origins of the Idea of Variability of the Laws of Nature in Ancient Greek Philosophy
3. Ideas of Variability: Between Antiquity and the Nineteenth Century
- Theological determinism. In the monotheistic picture of the world (Christianity, Islam), God was understood as the perfect Lawgiver. The laws of nature were considered an expression of His will. To admit that a law could change meant to recognize the imperfection or inconstancy of the Creator, which bordered on heresy.
- The mathematization of science. Beginning with Galileo and Newton, science sought universal, mathematically rigorous truths. The ideal of “eternal formulas” (such as the law of universal gravitation) psychologically excluded the thought that the constants or rules themselves could evolve.
4. At the Turn of the 19th and 20th Centuries: Charles Peirce (1839–1914) and Émile Boutroux (1845–1921)
- Change through the development of the world. The world does not stand still, and those regularities that we record today can slowly change along with the global development of the cosmos.
- Change through the subject of knowledge. Boutroux emphasizes the instrumental character of scientific knowledge. The laws formulated by science are not identical to “things-in-themselves”, but are representations of reality for human consciousness. An evolution of the cognitive abilities of the subject occurs, alongside the improvement of the analytical apparatus, allowing for the identification of deeper levels of reality. Thus, the “variability” of laws appears here as a consequence of human progress, which adapts its conceptual schemes to the unfolding complexity of a dynamic world.
5. Evolutionary Epistemology and the Variability of Laws
6. Social Epistemology and the Variability of Laws
7. Radical Constructivism and the Variability of Laws
8. I. Prigogine and L. Smolin
9. The Evolution of Laws and the Development of Science
- Basic concepts are introduced in an explicit, constructive, and uniform manner. This is precisely what allows us to state that these concepts are basic.
- Laws are the logical consequence of the deductive development of basic concepts by means of models. Thus, a strict hierarchy exists: basic concept + model → law.
- Optimization during analysis and comparison with experiment is applied solely to the propositions of the model. As a result, the number of degrees of freedom when analyzing potential discrepancies between the tentative theory and observations is sharply reduced.
10. Entropic Measure of Time and the Evolution of Laws
11. Conclusions
- Since the organism and the environment constantly influence each other, the structure of our nervous system slowly changes. When the structure of the “calculator” (the brain or instruments) changes, the laws “calculated” by it change as well.
- Laws are not the “truths of matter,” but parameters of our interface of interaction with the world. When humanity invents a new tool (for example, a collider or a quantum computer), it creates a new domain of reality that requires entirely new laws.
- The modification of laws occurs when the old “rules of the game” no longer allow a biological or social system to maintain equilibrium in an increasingly complex and evolving environment.
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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