First law: An object either remains at rest or continues to move at a constant velocity, unless acted upon by a force.
The law in itself is meaningless in one aspect whilst pretending to be something in another.
How so?
It is quite simple: Objects don't just start moving for no reason. There is a force which makes them move.
Secondly, if they are moving, they need a force to stop them.
None of that is meaningless, nor is it pretending.
In reality none of it works.
No, in reality, this is what always happens.
An object cannot ever be at rest because there is always forces acting upon it and it, them. It's called atmosphere.
Would you prefer it if it said a net force?
What about if iti isn't in the atmosphere?
An object can never remain in motion at a constant velocity unless a force is constantly applied to it, so the claim that it's UNLESS a force is acting upon it, is a pointless waste.
All the evidence shows the opposite, that in fact you need to apply a force to stop it.
If that's the case then there cannot ever be a force applied in the first place for anything to resist a motion or to change a motion.
Why?
The law is a nonsense.
Nope, just your analysis of it.
Second law: Second law: Force on an object is equal to the mass of that object multiplied by the acceleration of the object: F = ma.
So basically you apply energy to a dense mass and accelerate that mass or move that mass.
Not energy, FORCE!!
There is a slight difference.
Third law: For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.
In reality it's no different than the second law in terms of what it means.
Debatable, but somewhat.
Basically you only get out what you put in, in equal terms.
Your action creates and equal and opposite reaction to that action.
Whatever energy you apply you reap the reaction of that applied energy equally.
This works fine and likewise to the second law in a real Earth environment.
Nope. Completely wrong.
To express it in terms of energy:
You apply energy E to an object, this is an action, expressed as dE=E.
This has an equal and opposite term dE=-E which applies to you.
If you apply energy to accelerate an object then this energy comes from you.
Or to express it in terms of force:
If you apply force to an object to accelerate it, then the object applies a force to you that is equal in magnitude but opposite in direction.
Fictional space and rockets and such use these laws in the wrong way
No. Real rockets use these laws in the correct way.
with the pretence of equal and opposite reaction to action without the use of atmospheric pressure.
You don't need atmospheric pressure.
By the very nature of the law, if you throw an object away by applying a force to it, an equal and opposite force exists on you.