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Modern physics has historically treated invariance as a property of laws—something to be verified after formulation. Symmetries are discovered, conservation laws are derived, and invariants are preserved under transformation. This ordering, however, assumes that laws exist first, and invariance merely constrains their acceptable forms.
This chapter inverts that hierarchy.
Invariance is not a consequence of law. It is the precondition for existence.
By Mark HgginsModern physics has historically treated invariance as a property of laws—something to be verified after formulation. Symmetries are discovered, conservation laws are derived, and invariants are preserved under transformation. This ordering, however, assumes that laws exist first, and invariance merely constrains their acceptable forms.
This chapter inverts that hierarchy.
Invariance is not a consequence of law. It is the precondition for existence.