Why is the Pythagorean Theorem not the Pythagorean Law? Why do we call the Pythagorean Theorem a th

Mohammad Cannon

Mohammad Cannon

Answered question

2022-06-23

Why is the Pythagorean Theorem not the Pythagorean Law?
Why do we call the Pythagorean Theorem a theorem, not a law?
As far as I know, we call a theorem a theorem because though it's reliable in every observable case, its truthfulness cannot be proven for every case. However I've looked and it seems as though we (as the human race) have very extensive proofs of the Pythagorean Theorem, considering every case. Why is it that it hasn't made the transition from theorem to law? Is my terminology confused? Is it not as proven as I think it is? Is there some other condition for being a law that I don't know about?

Answer & Explanation

Trey Ross

Trey Ross

Beginner2022-06-24Added 30 answers

You seem to have jumbled mathematical and scientific terminology. Theorems state what is mathematically proven. Various kinds of scientific conclusions, including laws, are well-evidenced (with the whole of the philosophy of science as a footnote to that).

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