If scientific laws are compressions of stabilisation histories, then a natural question follows:
what happens when the practices that generate those histories change?
This is usually framed as “theory change” or “scientific revolution.”
But that framing quietly assumes something that has already been destabilised in this series:
that there is a stable object of knowledge that theories track more or less well.
Under the view developed so far, that assumption is no longer available.
So we have to ask differently:
what actually changes when scientific practice changes?
Not replacement, but reconfiguration
In standard accounts, science changes when:
- old theories are replaced by new ones
- better laws supersede weaker approximations
- improved models correct earlier misunderstandings
But if laws are compressions of stabilisation histories, then “replacement” is not quite right.
What actually changes is:
the set of practices that make stabilisation possible in the first place
This includes:
- experimental design
- instrumentation
- calibration regimes
- modelling conventions
- and standards of reproducibility
So what shifts is not just description.
It is:
the entire stabilisation-producing infrastructure
Stability depends on practice, not vice versa
Earlier in the series, stability was relocated:
- not as a property of the world
- but as an outcome of practice under constraint
Now the consequence becomes explicit:
if practice changes, stability changes
Not because the world has become unstable in itself, but because:
- the conditions under which stability is produced have shifted
Stability is therefore not fragile in general.
It is:
dependent on the persistence of stabilising configurations
When old laws stop working
When a scientific law “fails,” it is often described as:
- being superseded
- or shown to be approximate
- or valid only within a limited domain
But under the present framework, something more precise is happening:
the stabilisation history that supported the law is no longer fully reconstructable under new configurations of practice
This can happen when:
- instruments change
- measurement regimes are reconfigured
- environmental constraints are altered
- or new forms of modelling are introduced
The law does not suddenly become false.
Rather:
the stabilisation conditions that made it compressible are no longer uniformly available
Breakdown as loss of coordination
Scientific “breakdown” is often interpreted as failure of theory.
But here it appears as:
breakdown in the coordination of stabilisation practices across configurations
What fails is not a correspondence between theory and world.
What fails is:
- the alignment of experimental regimes
- the compatibility of measurement systems
- and the continuity of stabilisation structures across contexts
In short:
reproducibility across distributed practice becomes unstable
Why new theories appear coherent
New theories often appear not just more accurate, but more coherent.
This coherence is not simply intellectual.
It arises because:
they reorganise the conditions under which stabilisation becomes possible
A new theoretical framework:
- redefines what counts as a measurement
- reorganises experimental constraints
- and restructures how outcomes are compared
In doing so, it produces:
a new stabilisation regime capable of supporting its own compressions
This is why theory change feels like discovery, even when it is also reconstruction.
The illusion of continuous objects
One of the most persistent effects of changing practice is that:
objects appear to persist across theoretical change
But this persistence is not guaranteed by the world alone.
It is produced by:
- partial continuity in stabilisation practices
- overlapping calibration structures
- and retained comparability across regimes
Where these overlaps hold, objects appear stable.
Where they break, objects:
are reconfigured, redistributed, or dissolved into new relational structures
Objects are therefore not the constant across theory change.
They are:
the local stabilisation effects of partially continuous practice
What scientific change actually is
We can now restate the phenomenon more precisely:
Scientific change is a reconfiguration of the practices that produce and coordinate stability across distributed experimental systems.
It involves:
- altering measurement relations
- redefining experimental constraints
- reorganising calibration infrastructures
- and reshaping the conditions under which laws can be compressed
What changes is not simply knowledge.
It is:
the architecture of stability production
Why continuity still appears
Despite these shifts, science does not feel discontinuous in everyday practice.
This is because:
- many stabilisation structures persist across transitions
- new systems inherit partial constraints from old ones
- and coordination networks remain partially intact
So continuity is real—but it is:
a property of overlapping stabilisation regimes, not of invariant theoretical reference
Continuity is an effect of:
partial persistence in distributed coordination
The gravitational case revisited (final time)
Even in domains like gravitational measurement, where constants appear stable across centuries, what we observe is:
- evolving experimental techniques
- shifting calibration standards
- improved measurement precision
- and changing theoretical frameworks
Yet a stable value persists.
From this perspective, that stability reflects:
long-term success in maintaining coordinated stabilisation across evolving practices
Not a fixed property discovered once and for all.
But:
a continuously maintained achievement of distributed experimental coordination
Closing
When scientific practice changes, what breaks is not simply theory.
What breaks—or is reconfigured—is:
the system of practices through which stability is produced, coordinated, and compressed into laws
This reframes scientific change at its deepest level:
And this brings the series to its threshold:
if stability is always an outcome of practice, then scientific understanding is not a mirror of a stable world, but an evolving system for producing, coordinating, and maintaining stability under changing conditions of engagement with it