The characteristics of laws include objectivity, universality, stability, and repeatability.
Law is a Chinese word whose pinyin is guī lǜ, which means rhythmic; not chaotic. The main characteristics of laws are: (1) The laws are objective; (2) The laws are repetitive; (3) The laws are stable.
Laws refer to the inherent inevitable connections between things. This connection keeps recurring, often works under certain conditions, and determines the inevitable development of things in a certain direction.
The main characteristics of laws are:
(1) Laws are objective. Laws exist objectively and are not subject to people's will, but people can understand and utilize them through practice;
(2) Laws are repetitive. This is its most basic attribute. People have repeatedly explored social and natural phenomena, grasped their internal connections, and proved their regularity;
(3) The laws are stable. Although the law is not static, it is relatively stable. For example, the 24 solar terms of the lunar calendar have undergone some changes over thousands of years. Especially in recent years, although the earth has become warmer and the solar terms have advanced slightly, the general pattern has not changed much.
Laws are also called laws. The essential connection in the development process of objective things has a universal form. Laws and essence are concepts of the same degree. They both refer to aspects inherent in the thing itself, hidden behind the phenomenon, and determining or controlling the phenomenon. However, essence refers to the internal connection of things, which is composed of the internal contradictions of things, while law refers to the essential relationship of the same type of phenomena or the stable connection between essences in terms of the development process of things. It is an ever-changing world of phenomena. relatively static content.
Laws work repeatedly. As long as the necessary conditions are met, phenomena that conform to the rules will inevitably appear repeatedly.