An English question
By dufresne
@dufresne (137)
China
June 1, 2009 1:46am CST
In the sentence "I like to think of our work as a search for timeless principles--the enduring physics of great organizations--that will remain true and relevant no matter how the world changes around us.", I know "physics" means a "subject" and here it means "universal principle" or so, but I do want to know "physics" can often be used this way among your native speakers?
1 person likes this
1 response
@scarlet_woman (23463)
• United States
2 Jun 09
they honestly don't use it that much in that sense.
it's kind of overinflated english,showing off.
"workings" you might see more often than "physics"