Space aliens will inhabit the same universe that we do. Assuming the uniformity of nature, the physical world will behave the same for them as for us. They will have the same chemical elements etc. That's the physical realism idea. So if we interpret "the same physics" to refer to how reality actually behaves, then yes, aliens will have the same physics.
But... if we look at the history of physics here on Earth, we see that the ideas with which the same physical reality was conceptualized have changed dramatically over time. Our physical ideas do seem to be awfully contingent on the historical process that gave rise to them.
Simply by the nature of the thing, space aliens will have entirely different histories-of-ideas than we do. It might even go beyond that to different psychologies and different ways of thinking entirely. (Imagine intelligent social insects or something like that.)
So my expectation is that space aliens will live in the same fundamental reality that we do... but they are likely to conceptualize it very differently.
CC's post is very good and deserves thought. I'll reply to this part, in light of what I just said up above:
(Mar 4, 2026 03:58 AM)C C Wrote: So alternative conceptual frameworks and technical descriptions or guided behavior should offer the same or superior predictability and practical results, compared to own (though a high grade of inferiority would still qualify).
Science isn't just what people/aliens think about their surroundings or describing their conceptual vocabularies in doing it. There's a functional aspect that separates the practice of science from philosophy or religion or the history of either of them.
So does alien physics actually
work in the practical, predictability, engineering sense?
We like to believe that our present day science
works better than ancient or medieval science. Well, what if some extraterrestrial science, some totally different way of conceptualizing a shared reality, some totally different way of attacking problems, works even better in solving those problems than our science? (It might give them super-luminal or intertialess drives that seem impossible to our current way of thinking...)
Just because our current science works better than ancient, medieval or 19th century science, doesn't mean that it's the last word on anything. It's just the best that we human beings have at the moment.