I may not understand the question’s point, because as I read it the answer is a very obvious “Yes.” We determined Newton’s laws and Maxwell’s equations from observations of our world. So the planets in orbit around the sun, the moon around the earth, and an apple falling to the ground all lead to gravitation. The attraction between wires carrying current in the same direction (magnetic), the functioning of transformers (change in magnetic field produces electric field) and radio and light all fit together to give Maxwell’s equations.
So yes, a world with the macroscopic physical observations as ours does not violate Newton’s or Maxwell’s laws because our world with those observations doesn’t violate those laws. If Newton’s or Maxwell’s equations were different, the world you saw would necessarily be different.
I may not understand the question’s point, because as I read it the answer is a very obvious “Yes.” We determined Newton’s laws and Maxwell’s equations from observations of our world. So the planets in orbit around the sun, the moon around the earth, and an apple falling to the ground all lead to gravitation. The attraction between wires carrying current in the same direction (magnetic), the functioning of transformers (change in magnetic field produces electric field) and radio and light all fit together to give Maxwell’s equations.
So yes, a world with the macroscopic physical observations as ours does not violate Newton’s or Maxwell’s laws because our world with those observations doesn’t violate those laws. If Newton’s or Maxwell’s equations were different, the world you saw would necessarily be different.
What am I missing here?