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Laws of Physics Bias

A broader form of Thermodynamics Bias, extending the same cognitive error to all laws of physics, not just thermodynamics. Laws of Physics Bias is the metacognitive failure where one treats physical laws as absolute, context-free, and universally applicable while simultaneously ignoring the scientific biases, paradigms, frameworks, hegemonies, and facets that shape how those laws are understood, applied, and taught. Those with this bias act as if physics exists in a pure realm untouched by human cognition, social structures, or institutional politics—as if the laws descended from heaven rather than emerging from a scientific community with all its messiness. They demand that any apparent violation be reported to the entire academy, as if physics were a fragile orthodoxy needing defense rather than a robust but always-provisional description of reality. This bias prevents understanding how physical laws function within scientific practice—as powerful tools developed through human inquiry, not as magical commandments written in an unbreakable cosmic code.
Example: "When the philosopher suggested that physical laws might be descriptions rather than prescriptions, his Laws of Physics Bias triggered—he demanded she 'report her violation to the physics department' as if she'd proposed breaking gravity rather than thinking about what 'law' means in scientific contexts."
by Dumu The Void March 12, 2026
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