kmortis
Biomechanoid, Director of IDIOCY (Region 13)
Are you serious?Feynman?
Who's that?
Are you serious?Feynman?
Who's that?
[Homer Simpson]D'OH![/HS]He's joking, look at his avatar closely.
Sir Isaac Newton
How? Explain.Is that stretching the defintion of scientist?
How? Explain.
I knew this about Newton. Considering it was the 1600's, though, Newton was about as 'scientific' as it gets.
What are your thoughts on Copernicus or Galileo? Descarte?he may have been as scientific as it got, but that does not make him a scientist.
Behe and Dembski are about as scientific as creationism gets, that doesn't make them scientists either.
on the other hand, newton was a genius who added vastly to the human understanding of the world...
similar to my views on Newton, the helped greatly in understanding the world, and their work was valid, but not necessarily scientific. I think Newton is about the boundary of what is and is not scientific.What are your thoughts on Copernicus or Galileo? Descarte?
Newtons methods often leaned more to wards alchemy than what we would consider modern science (he was a member of a society which believed that they could turn themselves invisible for one thing, and that wasn't the strangest of his beliefs).
I have no doubt that Newton was a genius, and he helped lay many of the foundations of modern science, but his routes where in alchemy and magic.
The biography of newton by John Maynard Keynes is a good place to start to see this side of Newton.