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A branch of infrascience that examines the infrastructure underlying our knowledge of physical laws—the systems, structures, and conditions that make it possible to discover, test, and understand laws. The infrascience of physical laws investigates what must be in place for law-discovery to occur: experimental infrastructure (particle accelerators, observatories, laboratories) that enables us to probe law-governed behavior; theoretical infrastructure (mathematics, computation, simulation) that allows us to formulate and test laws; institutional infrastructure (funding agencies, research centers, journals) that supports law-seeking communities; and conceptual infrastructure (paradigms, frameworks, assumptions) that shapes what we look for and what we find. It also examines how this infrastructure shapes what laws we discover—how new instruments reveal new aspects of law, how theoretical advances transform our understanding, how institutional priorities direct attention to some laws rather than others.
Infrascience of the Laws of Physics Example: "His infrascience of physical laws research showed how the development of the Large Hadron Collider didn't just test existing laws—it created the possibility of discovering entirely new ones. The infrastructure didn't just enable inquiry; it shaped what could be found."
by Dumu The Void March 19, 2026
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