@brother
Science is somewhat like this:
Observation
Inference
Conclusion
Then observation again
And the cycle continues
So no laws will be perfect unless you have done an eternity of observation, collected a infinity of data and have seen everything till the end of time.
Science is not about rules, science is about observation.
@brother
Actually one of the problems is in the way we are teaching science in school. We teach science with theories and las rather then obsrrvation, inference and debate. That gives the impression of impossibility or something when talking about things which don't match the laws.
@brother
Well choice of the word was not much good. I used 'actually' just to highlight the statement ![]()
@brother
No worries mate, anyway my English not any perfect or good.
Studied in a rural school meant for tribal peoples ![]()
@brother
By the way which languages do you know?
@brother
I know 5 languages
4 indian languages: Gujrathi, Marathi, Hindi, Urdu
And ofcourse English.
@brother
Diversity is at the heart of India ![]()
@brother
You didn't had Indian students?
@brother
Most of the India knows English very well it's too much common here everywhere. Though many regions still remain here where English is still foreign, like I visited a hill-station which is situated in a region which has around 98% tribal population (surprisingly this tribes have defeated the British and the region was never under British rule) the signs in English there were all misspelled like hell.
'chilled beer' -> 'child beer'
@brother @mur2501 As a native English speaker from America, I disagree. I frequently use “actually” as a term of acknowledgement as in the phrase, “actually, yeah, that makes sense.” I didn’t interpret that response as a contradiction and I’m sure many of my peers wouldn’t either. Are you sure this isn’t just a peculiarity of how people around you use the word? Maybe it’s a particularly British English thing. Or maybe East Coast US is just weird.
If you're talking to a native English speaker from Britain, America, Australia, Canadan or New Zealand, and your response begins with "actually", they'll generally read it as a contradiction, challenge or correction, as I did here!