A scientific law describes the behavior of something that occurs. It is often described in mathematical relationships. For example the general law of gravitation describes the force between objects of various masses at various distances
A scientific theory, however, attempts to describe why something works. There are several theories of gravity, which attempt to explain why it occurs as it does.
Both Scientific Theories and Laws are based upon observation and experimentation. They can be disproved or modified to accommodate new discoveries, and must make predictions about future experiments and observations.
A scientific law describes the behavior of something that occurs. It is often described in mathematical relationships. For example the general law of gravitation describes the force between objects of various masses at various distances
A scientific theory, however, attempts to describe why something works. There are several theories of gravity, which attempt to explain why it occurs as it does.
Both Scientific Theories and Laws are based upon observation and experimentation. They can be disproved or modified to accommodate new discoveries, and must make predictions about future experiments and observations.
A scientific law completely describes the results of a particular situation. A theory describes a range of results with some question about what occurs at the margins. In general Laws are more specific than Theories. For example, we have Newton's Law of Universal Gravitation that only applies in weak gravitational fields, but in general we have the Theory of Gravity.
A law is proven, a theory has yet to be proven
A Theory is unproven, but Laws are proven. Theory becomes law after that theory is proven correct.
A Theory is unproven, but Laws are proven. Theory becomes law after that theory is proven correct.
A law has been proven to be true under all known criteria; a theory has yet to proven or disproven.
Differentiate or compare theory from law
"Law" is just a thumbnail version of a theory.
The criminal theory is related to the law enforcement law. It has various theories on criminology and models of law enforcement.
A Theory is unproven, but Laws are proven. Theory becomes law after that theory is proven correct.
law is based on fact theory is a concept/idea
The difference between theory and natural law is that a theory is a framework, while a natural law is a single rule, usually expressed in mathematics. They are not two different stages of acceptance among scientists (as it is sometimes claimed in error); they are two completely different things; a theory does not evolve into a law with when sufficient evidence for a theory has been gathered for example. For example consider: The Theory of Special Relativity <-- Theory Speed of light is constant <-- Law Theory of Electromagnetism <-- Theory Divergence of the Magnetic field is zero <-- Law Quantum Field Theory <-- Theory Conservation of Energy <-- Law
A law has been proven to be true under all known criteria; a theory has yet to proven or disproven.
When they create theory. Then they search for the different proof for proving it. If they succeed then After confirmation the theory become law.
Differentiate or compare theory from law
A law is something that is said to be true and is a establised int the science community already. A theory is something that a scientist has come up with that hasnt been proven true or false.
command of sovereign sanctioned by punishments is law by imperative theory and law as legal science of norms is by pure theory of law.
The theory come first because without a theory there is nothing to make a law.
A theory, when proven over time, can become a law. Example: Law of Gravity and Theory of Evolution
There is confusion over this because "law" and "theory" mean very different things in every day life compared to science. A "law" is just an outdated term for "theory." Theories are explanations of a phenomenon that have undergone rigorous experiments by scientists. A law is no more scientifically valid than a theory in science. A principle is usually more specific than a theory. For instance, you have the Theory of Quantum Mechanics and within that, you have Pauli's exclusion principle.
Pure Theory of Law was created in 1934.