A theoretical framework proposing that the laws of physics are not rigid, immutable decrees but
flexible patterns that can adapt, shift, or change under certain conditions. This theory challenges the traditional view of laws as eternal and unchanging, suggesting instead that they might be more like habits of nature—regularities that emerged with the universe and could, in principle, change. The flexibility of physical laws might manifest in extreme conditions (inside black holes, at the Big
Bang), through
quantum effects (where probabilities rather certainties reign), or through unknown mechanisms that allow law-like behavior to vary across
cosmic epochs. The theory doesn't claim that anything goes, but that the boundaries of physical possibility might be less fixed than traditionally assumed—that nature has room to maneuver within its own
rules.
Theory of the Flexibility of the Laws of Physics Example: "She wondered whether the constants of nature might have been
different in the early universe—a question that presupposes the flexibility of physical laws. If they could be
different then, could they change
now? The theory opens possibilities traditional physics forecloses."