Is a Biological Principle a Scientific Law?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around the distinction between scientific theories and laws, with a focus on the claim that a theory can become a law if it has substantial evidence. A participant challenges this notion, referencing an article that suggests a well-verified theory in biology can be considered a biological principle, which the other individual equates to a law. The conversation highlights the misunderstanding of scientific terminology, particularly regarding the theory of evolution, which one participant dismisses because it is not classified as a law. The dialogue concludes with skepticism about the value of debating with someone who has a fixed mindset, emphasizing that evolution will not transition into a law.
Solitos
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Hi. My understanding was that a scientific theory and law complement each other. There is a guy at work that insists that a theory with more evidence becomes a law. Recently he cited an article that said that a theory that has been repeatedly verified and appears to have a wide applicability in Biology, it may assume the status of Biological Principle...then he concludes that principle is a law. Is that conclusion correct? Thank you very much.
 
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Words, words, words. "Law" doesn't mean much since nothing is absolutely proven. Newton's "Law" of Gravitation is a great example. It's a "Law", but it's wrong (albeit very useful for human-scale things)
 
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So...was I wrong? Some context: this guy does not accept the theory of evolution because it is not a law yet (in his words).
 
Solitos said:
So...was I wrong? Some context: this guy does not accept the theory of evolution because it is not a law yet (in his words).
So, why are you arguing with an idiot? Such arguments never have any end. He's already made up his mind and I doubt anything you can say will change it. Evolution will NEVER be a "law". Words, words, words.
 
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Thanks to everyone... time to call it a day. Thread closed.
 
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