Conservation laws are often treated as eternal decrees: energy, momentum, charge can never be created or destroyed. Physics presents them as providential guarantees — invisible guardians that secure the cosmos against loss or rupture.
But conservation is not divine providence. It is the trace of how processes hold together across perspectives. Persistence is relational, not absolute. Energy is not a substance that is “kept safe”; it is a relational measure, a way of tracking transformations without remainder. Momentum is not an untouchable essence; it is the consistency of interaction when potentials actualise in symmetry.
What appears as conservation is the resonance of relational alignment. Symmetries constrain how processes can unfold, and within those constraints, potentials persist as patterned possibilities. There is no external guarantor, no metaphysical safeguard. Only relation, maintaining itself through unfolding actualisation.
Seen this way, conservation shifts from being an eternal guarantee to being the continuity of relation. It is not law imposed from outside but persistence enacted from within — a weaving that holds as long as processes continue to coordinate.
The cosmos does not need providence. It only needs relation.