No, I would have said: Well Sir Isaac, I can certainly feel "gravity' as you call it so your gravity theory is well "qualified", and I can see that your quantitative work applies very well here on Earth in empirical experiments too.
(bold added)
Such as? The ones on "gravity", I mean ...
BTW, are you sure Newton - or any of his contemporaries - would know what you're talking about ("
I can certainly feel "gravity' as you call it")?
I can't say for sure that the planets and stars work as you claim they do or that your math will stand the test of time, but "bravo".
Um ... did you miss the part about how "gravity" did not mean - then - what it means today?
Did you not grasp that - until Newton - "gravity" was not a physical law, a law of nature, a natural force, ....?
But we all experience it.
No we don't.
How many times to I have to tell you!
When you fall, it's the Earth spirits.
When you rise, when submerged in water, it's the Water spirits.
When hot air rises, it's the Air spirits, infused with Fire spirits.
And so on ...
What you "experience" is falling, or rising (when submerged in water), or floating (when on water). The feelings are quite different, and distinct.
Further, your experience is a poor guide ... how do you think flight simulators (to take just one example) give you the fully authentic feeling of falling? of accelerating upwards ('against gravity')?
Did you miss that part about the fact I can "experience" "gravity" here on Earth? Did you notice that a rock in the lab experiences it too?
If said rock is floating in mercury, it is not experiencing gravity.
The leaves in my back yard, on a windy day, do not experience gravity.
The fish in my neighbour's aquarium do not experience gravity.
And so on.
"Gravity" is hypothetical, something made up by natural philosophers ...
Did you miss that part about how I can "feel" it and "see' it have an effect here on Earth and therefore I have no problem with you mathematically quantifying it, and I can check your work if I want to? It doesn't even matter one iota whether I "percieve" it as a "force" or a "curvature", I do in fact "feel" gravity every single day. It's fully "qualified" in every empirical way. FYI, I'm not really interested in how you personally think other people thought of gravity prior to Newton. That sounds like a useless trip down denial lane.
Actually, it's an interesting example of how easily we fully internalise the results of centuries of physics, and how hard it is to recognise that things like "gravity" are not what we experience, or feel ...
We experience gravity. It's well "qualified" and shows up in real labs on Earth.
"Electrical current" is also highly "qualified". We can see it's direct effect on plasma in lab.
Same deal, ditto wrt interactions mediated by gluons and the W's and the Z, ...
You are therefore welcome to point at the sky and claim "electricity did it" if you like. You might be right or wrong, but at least it's a well "qualified" theory. I know from empirical experiments that neutrinos exist
But you didn't, certainly not before 1930 ... and you may know that SUSY particles exist too, perhaps as early as 2011 ...
so you're welcome to point at the sky and claim neutrinos did it too. Ditto on the right or wrong aspect, but at least I won't cry foul about a lack of qualification.
That's great news!
So there will be no more screeds denouncing the Λ version of dark energy, nor any cosmological models which incorporate it? After all, Λ is merely one part of a mathematical equation which describes gravity, and can be shown to exist, by pointing to things in the sky ...
I can't see any empirical evidence to suggest that SUSY particles exist or have any of the various properties that you suggest.
But the day they turn up in LHC experimental results you will, right?
And the day XENON (or another DM detector) records DM particle footprints you will, right?
You can't show me a single controlled instance of a bit of dark matter generating one single gamma ray on Earth, but you expect me to believe "dark matter spirits in the sky did it." Notice a key difference related to *qualification*?
No I can't, and don't, see that ... "gravity" is purely hypothetical, as is "electric current". All you are doing is cherry picking from the centuries of physics that which you wish to call "
*qualification*"; this is not objective, is not independently verifiable, and is internally inconsistent.
IOW, the very antithesis of science.