You indicate here that time/space are dependent on physical laws but NOT that physical laws are dependent on time and space. Is that still your position and why can you not bring yourself to make that clear here whereas in reply#59 You make it clear that the laws are not dependent on time and space for their existence.
How many times do I have to say the same thing for it to be
clear to you Vlad - both on the basic inter-relationship between fundamental physical laws and time/space, and using an analogy of a specific type of physical law (gravity) and a manifestation dependant on that physical principle (orbits). I used the latter as you seem challenged by the notion of time and space being relative and not fixed (which physicists have recognised for decades in one case, centuries in the other). So here goes:
47 - But as you point out those physical laws fundamentally define time and space so the notion of before or after - of beyond or outside - those physical laws is non-sensical.
48 - Origin is a concept predicated on a point in time - when something first emerged to appeared. But the physical laws define time so the very notion of origin is trumped by those physical laws.
51 - But time and space are a manifestation of the physical laws - eternal is a temporal concept (i.e. to do with time) so you are are reading this the wrong way round as the very concept of 'eternal' is defined by those physical laws. And no the physical laws aren't really independent of time and space because the latter are intrinsically defined by those physical laws.
53 - Wrong way around - time and space are dependent on the physical laws.
57 - Given that time/space are dependent on physical laws it is not correct to say that time/space and physical laws are independent - on the contrary they are inextricably linked as time/space are defined by and indeed a manifestation of those physical laws.
59 - Time/space and the physical laws which define them and which time/space are a manifestation of are clearly inextricably linked - i.e. they are not independent. Claiming somehow that physical laws and time/space are independent is as non-sensical as claiming that gravity and the orbiting of the planets in our solar system are somehow independent.
61 - Because time and space are manifestations of those physical laws - time and space only exist because of those physical laws.
73 - I on the other hand clearly stated their dependency - in other words that time/space time are manifestations of those physical laws - time and space only exist because of those physical laws.
75 - You asked about their dependency and I have been very clear - in other words that time/space time are manifestations of those physical laws - time and space only exist because of those physical laws. Dependency doesn't have to be equally two way, but that doesn't mean there is no dependency.
Try this one - using one of those physical laws:
The orbiting of our planets around the sun is dependent on the laws of gravity.
However
The laws of gravity are not dependent on the orbiting of our planets around the sun.
79 - As I've mentioned previously, your question is as non-sensical as asking how gravity can exist if it isn't dependent on the orbits of the planets. The fundamental laws of physics sit above (in other words are more fundamentally) that things which are manifestations of those laws, including time, space, orbits of planets, design of rockets that allow them to escape from earth's gravitational pull etc etc.
81 - Which are themselves dependent on the laws of physics - space/time don't really exist outside the laws of physics in the same way are planetary orbits don't really exist outside of the laws of gravity (one of those fundamental laws of physics).
118 - In fact I think I was very clear that the laws of nature are themselves determined by, and predicated on, those fundamental laws of physics.
167 - Not really - it has been pretty well universally accepted for a long while within the physics community that neither space nor time are fixed and unchanging, but are relative concepts determined by fundamental principles of physics. This was recognised as long ago as Newton for space, and more recently for time.
231 - Nope I never said that either - I have been clear that the fundamental laws of physics and time/space are not independent - the latter is dependent on the former.
236 - 'I have been clear that the fundamental laws of physics and time/space are not independent - the latter is dependent on the former' - which is entirely consistent with reply 59 and many subsequent replies in which I have clearly indicate that the fundamental physical laws and time/space are not independent as time/space are dependent on those physical laws.