摘要: For over six decades, the violation of parity symmetry has been treated as a foundational fact of modern physics. This article re-examines that conclusion and argues that parity was never violated—because it was never physically there to begin with. Through a structural analysis of the 1957 Wu experiment, the τ–θ puzzle, and the broader theoretical language of mid-20th-century physics, we show that what was interpreted as a broken symmetry was in fact the failure of a projected mathematical ideal to match real, constructed systems.
We classify three fundamentally different types of symmetry—structural, formal, and imagined—and demonstrate how their conflation enabled an unverified mirror concept to gain the status of physical law. We further argue that the so-called “weak interaction” served not as an explanatory mechanism, but as a linguistic placeholder that displaced one domain of misunderstanding onto another.
This paper is not a technical revision, but a philosophical reattribution. It invites the community to reconsider what qualifies as a law, what counts as verification, and how much of modern physics rests not on empirical construction, but on the successful rebranding of unresolved confusion.