Are the laws dependent for their existence on time and space?
If not how do they exist?
Vlad
You seem to be thrashing about for no good reason - let me try this approach. You seem to be seeing the 'laws' that describe phenomena as being somehow separate entities from the phenomena that they describe, where what they describe would happen anyway whether or not the mechanisms involved were recognised by humans.
Any of these 'laws' is a description of how phenomena present: they are, therefore, grounded in naturalistic methods. For them to have been set out in the first place indicates that there has been sufficiently extensive study to show that certain aspects occur under certain conditions to the extent that the description of them can be viewed as a 'law' - and if it were found that any the 'law' was invalidated by new evidence then it would no longer be a 'law'. The phenomena concerned must be a feature within time and space since for it to have been investigated in first place, since the notion of investigating something that was not within time and space wouldn't make sense as things stand.
Let us take an example of a 'law' and maybe you can tell us what you think the problems are, so cast your mind back to school physics lessons and let use use Boyle's Law as an example:
The absolute pressure exerted by a given mass of an ideal gas is inversely proportional to the volume it occupies if the temperature and amount of gas remain unchanged within a closed system.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boyle%27s_lawI'd say this law depends on their being relevant stuff within time and space, since if it were otherwise this law would never have be formulated.