Fundamental Law(s) may refer to:
- Organic law, in particular,
- Constitution, in particular,
- The Russian Constitution of 1906. An organic law or Fundamental law is a Law or system of laws which forms the foundation of a Government, Corporation or other organization's A constitution is a system for government often Codified as a written document that establishes the rules and principles of an autonomous political entity The first Russian Constitution, known as the Fundamental Laws, was enacted on April 23, 1906, on the eve of the opening of the first State
- The German Grundgesetz (More commonly translated as "Basic Law"). The Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany (Grundgesetz für die Bundesrepublik Deutschland is the Constitution of Germany.
- The four individual laws that together make up the Constitution of Sweden. The Swedish Constitution consists of four fundamental laws ( Swedish: grundlagar, singular grundlag)
- The Fundamental Laws of England. In the 1760s William Blackstone described the Fundamental Laws of England in Commentaries on the Laws of England, Book the First - Chapter the First: Of the
- The Basic Laws of a country which does not use the term "constitution", or has an uncodified constitution. The term basic law is used in some places as an alternative to " Constitution " implying it is a temporary but necessary measure without formal enactment
Fundamental laws of nature, physics, thermodynamics, and so on. Physics (Greek Physis - φύσις in everyday terms is the Science of Matter and its motion. In Physics, thermodynamics (from the Greek θερμη therme meaning " Heat " and δυναμις dynamis meaning "
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