Many experts believe that the $\mathsf{P} \neq \mathsf{NP}$ conjecture is true and use it in their results. My concern is that the complexity strongly depends on the $\mathsf{P} \neq \mathsf{NP}$ conjecture.
So my question is:
As long as the $\mathsf{P}\neq\mathsf{NP}$ conjecture is not proven, can/should one consider it as a law of nature, as indicated in the quote from Strassen? Or should we treat it as a mathematical conjecture that maybe proved or disproved someday?
Quote:
"The evidence in favor of Cook's and Valiant's hypotheses is so overwhelming, and the consequences of their failure are so grotesque, that their status may perhaps be compared to that of physical laws rather than that of ordinary mathematical conjectures."
[Volker Strassen's laudation to the Nevanlinna Prize winner, Leslie G. Valian, in 1986]
I ask this question when reading the post Physics results in TCS?. It is perhaps interesting to note that computational complexity has some similarities to (theoretical) physic: many important complexity results have been proved by assuming $\mathsf{P} \neq \mathsf{NP}$, while in theoretical physic results are proven by assuming some physical laws. In this sense, $\mathsf{P} \neq \mathsf{NP}$ can be considered something like $E = mc^2$. Back to Physics results in TCS?:
Could (part of) TCS be a branch of natural sciences?
Clarification:
(c.f. Suresh's answer below)
Is it legitimate to say that the $\mathsf{P}\neq\mathsf{NP}$ conjecture in complexity theory is as fundamental as a physical laws in theoretical physics (as Strassen said)?