For the off-topic-detectors: this is a metaphorical rant on photography!
If a scientific theory is only "laboratory right" and has no merit in real life it is not wrong per se, it is just meaningless?
I recently learned that the correct treatment of soil is often tested in a lab with homogenized and/or sterilized soil.
In real life soil is full of microorganisms, fungi/mycelium, nematodes, worms, plants and other life and it is out in the open.
No meaningful conclusions can be drawn from the sterilized test, except for greenhouse cultures growing in such conditions.
Analogy:
If I setup a photographic quality control scheme in a factory assembly belt I will do anything to exclude external interference factors.
If I am to take photos in the field I choose my tools carefully to be able to achieve the desired pictorial effect, either clean or wild to my liking.
For the first application, the "laws of equivalence" might be useful, for the field they are not.