All Thinkers

Isaac Newton

Isaac Newton (1643-1727) was an English mathematician, physicist, and natural philosopher. He was born prematurely in Woolsthorpe, Lincolnshire, and his father died before he was born. He studied at Trinity College, Cambridge, but when the university closed because of an outbreak of plague in 1665, he returned to his family farm and spent roughly eighteen months there during which he made several of the most important discoveries in the history of science. He developed the mathematical foundations of calculus, began developing his theory of gravity, and conducted his first experiments on light and colour. He returned to Cambridge and eventually became a professor there. His great work, the Principia Mathematica, published in 1687, set out his three laws of motion and his theory of universal gravitation. It was recognised immediately as one of the greatest intellectual achievements in history. He also served as Master of the Royal Mint, reforming the English currency, and as President of the Royal Society. He was famously difficult in his personal relationships and spent enormous amounts of time on alchemy and biblical interpretation, interests that are less often mentioned than his physics.

Origin
England, United Kingdom
Lifespan
1643-1727
Era
17th-18th century
Subjects
Physics Mathematics Natural Philosophy Scientific Revolution Optics
Why They Matter

Newton matters because he demonstrated that the physical world operates according to mathematical laws that human reason can discover and describe, and that these laws apply everywhere: on Earth and in the heavens. Before Newton, the motions of the planets and the fall of objects on Earth were understood as fundamentally different kinds of phenomena. Newton showed they were governed by the same law of universal gravitation. This was not only a scientific achievement but a philosophical revolution. It established that nature is rational and orderly in a way that human mathematics can capture. It gave enormous confidence to the idea that reason could unlock the secrets of the natural world. The Enlightenment, with its faith in reason, science, and human progress, was inspired partly by Newton's achievement. His laws held for two centuries until Einstein showed they needed revision at very high speeds and very large scales. Understanding Newton is essential for understanding how modern science works and what it has achieved.

Key Ideas
1
Universal gravitation: one law for Earth and sky
Newton's most famous idea is the law of universal gravitation: every object in the universe attracts every other object with a force that depends on their masses and the distance between them. The larger the masses and the smaller the distance, the stronger the gravitational force. This single law explained why apples fall to the ground, why the Moon orbits the Earth, and why the planets orbit the Sun. Before Newton, the motions of heavenly bodies and the behaviour of objects on Earth were thought to be governed by different principles. Newton showed they were the same, governed by one universal law. This unification of the earthly and the heavenly was one of the greatest intellectual achievements in history.
2
The three laws of motion
Newton's three laws of motion describe how objects behave when forces act on them. The first law says that an object stays still or moves in a straight line at constant speed unless a force acts on it: this is inertia. The second law says that when a force acts on an object, it accelerates in proportion to the force and inversely to its mass: more force or less mass means more acceleration. The third law says that every action has an equal and opposite reaction: if you push a wall, the wall pushes back with the same force. These three laws, together with the law of gravitation, allowed Newton to calculate the motion of almost any object, from falling stones to orbiting planets.
3
White light contains all colours
Newton made important discoveries about light by passing sunlight through a glass prism and observing that it separated into a spectrum of colours: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet. He showed that white light is not pure and simple but a mixture of all these colours. When he passed the spectrum through a second prism and recombined it, he got white light back. This was a major discovery both for physics and for our understanding of colour. It also demonstrated something important about Newton's method: he did not simply observe, he intervened, using instruments to isolate and test specific aspects of natural phenomena.
Key Quotations
"If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants."
— Letter to Robert Hooke, 1675
This is Newton's most quoted statement and one of the most important in the history of science. He is acknowledging that his achievements built on the work of those who came before him. Science is not the product of lone geniuses but of a tradition of inquiry in which each generation builds on the work of the last. This image also captures something about the proper intellectual attitude: humility about your own contribution and gratitude to those whose work made yours possible. The statement was made in a letter to Robert Hooke, with whom Newton had a bitter dispute about priority, which gives it a slightly ironic flavour.
"I do not know what I may appear to the world, but to myself I seem to have been only like a boy playing on the seashore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me."
— Attributed, reported by David Brewster
This statement, reportedly made near the end of Newton's life, is one of the most beautiful expressions of scientific humility ever recorded. Newton, whose achievements had transformed humanity's understanding of the physical world, describes himself as a child playing on the beach, finding the occasional interesting stone while the vast ocean of undiscovered truth stretches before him. It captures the proper attitude of the scientist: wonder at the immensity of what is not yet known, even in the midst of extraordinary achievement. It also captures something about the nature of scientific progress: each discovery reveals the vastness of what remains to be discovered.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Scientific Thinking When introducing how science builds understanding through observation and mathematics
How to introduce
Ask: how did people explain why things fall before Newton? After discussion, introduce Newton's contribution: not just observing that things fall but finding the mathematical law that describes how they fall, and then showing that the same law explains why the Moon orbits the Earth. Ask: what is powerful about this? What does it mean to find a single mathematical law that explains both everyday phenomena and the motions of distant planets? Connect to the idea of scientific unification: the discovery that apparently different phenomena are governed by the same underlying law.
Numeracy and Mathematical Thinking When discussing the relationship between mathematics and the physical world
How to introduce
Introduce Newton's extraordinary achievement: using mathematics to describe and predict the behaviour of the physical world with precision. Ask: why do you think mathematics works so well for describing physical reality? This is actually a deep philosophical question: the physicist Eugene Wigner called it the unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics. Newton showed that the universe seems to be written in mathematical language. Ask: does this tell us something fundamental about the nature of reality? Or is it simply that we developed mathematics by studying the physical world and so it naturally fits it?
Further Reading

For a short biography

Richard Westfall's The Life of Isaac Newton (1993, Cambridge University Press) is the best accessible account of his life and work.

For his science

Clifford Conner's A People's History of Science (2005, Nation Books) places Newton in the context of the broader scientific community. The Royal Society has freely available digitised copies of Newton's original papers.

For a vivid introduction

Bill Bryson's A Short History of Nearly Everything (2003, Doubleday) gives an engaging account of Newton's place in the history of science.

Key Ideas
1
The scientific method: hypotheses and experiments
Newton made important contributions to scientific method as well as to specific scientific discoveries. He was insistent that scientific explanations must be based on observation and experiment rather than on speculation. His famous phrase hypotheses non fingo, I do not feign hypotheses, expressed his commitment to staying close to what could be demonstrated. He was suspicious of speculative explanations that went beyond what observation could support. At the same time, he used mathematics to extend the reach of observation: by combining careful measurement with mathematical reasoning, he could calculate things that no one had ever directly observed, such as the mass of the Earth or the path of a comet.
2
Calculus: a new mathematics for a changing world
Newton developed calculus, independently of the German mathematician Gottfried Leibniz who developed it at the same time, to solve problems that existing mathematics could not handle. Classical mathematics was good at dealing with fixed quantities. But Newton needed to describe things that change continuously: the speed of a falling object at any instant, the rate at which the force of gravity changes with distance. Calculus provided the mathematical tools for describing continuous change. It became one of the most important tools in mathematics, physics, and engineering, essential for everything from calculating the trajectories of spacecraft to modelling the spread of diseases.
3
Standing on the shoulders of giants
Newton famously wrote in a letter: if I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants. He was acknowledging that his discoveries built on the work of earlier scientists and mathematicians, including Galileo, Kepler, and Descartes. This statement captures something important about how science works: it is a cumulative, collaborative process in which each generation builds on the work of those before. No scientist works in isolation or starts from nothing. The image of standing on the shoulders of giants also suggests that progress in science is not simply a matter of individual genius but of a tradition of inquiry that extends across many people and many generations.
Key Quotations
"Truth is ever to be found in simplicity, and not in the multiplicity and confusion of things."
— Unpublished manuscript
Newton is stating a methodological principle: the best scientific explanation is the simplest one that accounts for the observed facts. His own greatest achievement, the law of universal gravitation, is strikingly simple in its mathematical form, yet it explains an enormous range of phenomena. This principle of simplicity, or what scientists call Occam's razor, is one of the guiding principles of good scientific explanation. It does not mean that reality is simple, but that we should prefer the simplest explanation that fits the evidence over more complicated ones that explain nothing more.
"I can calculate the motion of heavenly bodies, but not the madness of people."
— Attributed to Newton after losing money in the South Sea Bubble
Newton reportedly said this after losing a large amount of money in the South Sea Bubble, a financial speculation scheme that collapsed in 1720. The statement reveals both the power and the limits of Newtonian science. His mathematical methods could calculate the precise positions of planets centuries in advance. But the behaviour of human beings in financial markets, driven by hope, fear, greed, and social contagion, was beyond his mathematics. Human systems are governed by different principles from physical systems, and the tools that work brilliantly for one do not necessarily transfer to the other.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Research Skills When discussing how scientific knowledge is built cumulatively
How to introduce
Introduce Newton's statement about standing on the shoulders of giants. Ask: can you trace the chain of scientists whose work Newton built on? Galileo's observations of falling bodies and the moons of Jupiter. Kepler's laws of planetary motion. Descartes's analytic geometry. Ask: what does this tell us about how scientific knowledge actually develops? Connect to Kuhn: Newton's achievement was building a new paradigm that unified existing knowledge. Ask: is there someone in any field you care about whose work you are standing on the shoulders of?
Critical Thinking When examining the limits of any framework or method
How to introduce
Introduce Newton's comment about calculating heavenly bodies but not the madness of people. Ask: what does this tell us about the relationship between scientific method and human behaviour? Are the methods that work so brilliantly for physical systems applicable to social and human systems? Connect to Kuhn: Newton's mechanics was a paradigm that worked brilliantly within its domain but broke down at its edges, both at very high speeds and in the unpredictable domain of human behaviour.
Scientific Thinking When discussing the relationship between theory and experiment
How to introduce
Introduce Newton's principle of hypotheses non fingo: explanations must be derived from observation, not invented to satisfy philosophical preferences. Ask: why is this important? What is the difference between a hypothesis that can be tested against observation and one that cannot? Connect to Karl Popper's later concept of falsifiability: a scientific claim must be one that could in principle be shown to be wrong by evidence. Ask: can you think of claims that sound scientific but are not falsifiable?
Further Reading

Newton's Principia Mathematica in Andrew Motte's translation is available freely online and the Preface and early sections are accessible to non-specialists.

For the philosophical implications

E.A. Burtt's The Metaphysical Foundations of Modern Science (1924, Doubleday) is the classic account of how Newton's physics changed philosophical thinking.

For Newton and alchemy

Michael White's Isaac Newton: The Last Sorcerer (1997, Fourth Estate) examines his less well-known interests in an accessible way.

Key Ideas
1
The mechanical universe and its philosophical implications
Newton's physics suggested a particular picture of the universe: a vast machine operating according to fixed mathematical laws, in which every event is the determined consequence of prior causes. This mechanical picture of the universe had profound philosophical implications. If the universe operated like clockwork, with everything determined by the laws of physics, where was the room for human free will, for divine intervention, for genuine novelty and surprise? Newton himself believed deeply in God and thought of his physics as revealing the rational order that God had built into creation. But later thinkers drew more radical conclusions: if nature was fully mechanical, perhaps human beings and human choices were also fully mechanical.
2
Newton and alchemy: the limits of the mechanical model
A less well-known aspect of Newton is that he devoted at least as much time to alchemy and biblical interpretation as to what we now call physics. He filled thousands of pages with alchemical experiments and biblical chronology. This is often treated as an embarrassing eccentricity, but it reveals something important. Newton did not himself hold the purely mechanical picture of nature that his physics seemed to imply. He believed in active principles, forces that could not be reduced to mechanical pushes and pulls: gravity itself was, for Newton, mysterious and potentially spiritual in character. He wrote that he could calculate the motions of heavenly bodies but not the madness of men.
3
The Newtonian revolution and its limits
Newton's physics reigned for over two centuries as the most successful scientific theory ever developed. It explained the motions of planets, predicted the existence of new planets from irregularities in the orbits of known ones, enabled precise navigation at sea, and provided the foundation for engineering and technology. But in the early twentieth century, Einstein showed that Newton's mechanics needed revision at very high speeds and in very strong gravitational fields, and quantum mechanics showed that Newton's laws did not apply at the scale of atoms and subatomic particles. Applying Kuhn's concept of paradigm shift: Newton was not wrong in any simple sense but was a highly successful approximation that held within a specific domain and broke down at its edges.
Key Quotations
"Nature is pleased with simplicity, and affects not the pomp of superfluous causes."
— Principia Mathematica, 1687
This is Newton's statement of what scientists now call the principle of parsimony or Occam's razor. Nature does not use more causes than are necessary to produce its effects. When you are constructing a scientific explanation, do not multiply entities or causes unnecessarily: if a simpler explanation accounts for all the observations, prefer it to a more complicated one. This methodological principle has guided scientific explanation from Newton's time to the present. It reflects not only a practical strategy for good science but a philosophical claim about the nature of the universe: it is orderly and economical rather than chaotic and extravagant.
"Hypotheses non fingo. Whatever is not deduced from the phenomena is to be called an hypothesis; and hypotheses have no place in experimental philosophy."
— Principia Mathematica, General Scholium, 1713
This Latin phrase, I do not feign hypotheses, is Newton's statement of his empirical method. He insists that scientific explanations must be derived from observation and experiment, not invented to satisfy philosophical or theological preferences. This was a direct challenge to the Cartesian tradition, which tried to derive physical laws from first principles of reason. Newton argued that you had to start from what you could actually observe and measure, not from what seemed philosophically necessary. This commitment to grounding explanation in observation rather than speculation is one of the defining characteristics of modern science.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Philosophy of Science When applying Kuhn's framework to the history of physics
How to introduce
Apply Kuhn's paradigm framework to Newton. Ask: what was the paradigm before Newton, and what anomalies had accumulated that it could not explain? How did Newton's Principia constitute a paradigm shift? Then ask: what happened when Einstein and quantum mechanics showed that Newton's mechanics needed revision? Was this a refutation of Newton, or a more complex relationship? Connect to Kuhn's insight that paradigms do not simply fail: they break down at their edges while continuing to work brilliantly within their domain.
History of Ideas When examining the philosophical and cultural impact of Newton's science
How to introduce
Introduce the broader philosophical impact of Newton's mechanical universe: a picture of nature as a vast machine operating according to fixed mathematical laws. Ask: what are the philosophical implications of this picture? Does it leave room for free will, for divine intervention, for genuine novelty? Introduce the irony that Newton himself was deeply religious and spent more time on alchemy and biblical interpretation than on physics. Ask: what does this tell us about the relationship between a scientist's personal beliefs and the broader implications of their work? Connect to McLuhan's insight that the medium, here the Newtonian paradigm, shapes culture independently of the intentions of its creator.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Newton discovered gravity when an apple fell on his head.

What to teach instead

The apple story is almost certainly a later embellishment, and even in the versions that mention an apple, Newton was watching it fall in an orchard, not having it hit him on the head. The real point is that Newton spent years developing the mathematical theory of gravitation and testing it against astronomical observations. His insight was not a sudden inspiration but the product of sustained mathematical work over many years. The apple story, even if it has a kernel of truth, misrepresents how scientific discovery actually works: through sustained effort and mathematical reasoning rather than sudden inspiration.

Common misconception

Einstein proved Newton wrong.

What to teach instead

Einstein showed that Newton's mechanics needed revision in conditions that Newton had never encountered: very high speeds approaching the speed of light, and very strong gravitational fields near massive objects. Within the range of conditions Newton studied, his mechanics remains extraordinarily accurate. Engineers still use Newtonian mechanics to design bridges and calculate the trajectories of spacecraft. Einstein did not prove Newton wrong but showed that Newtonian mechanics was a special case of a more general theory that applies across a wider range of conditions. Newton's laws are still correct within their domain.

Common misconception

Newton worked alone and made his discoveries through pure individual genius.

What to teach instead

Newton built extensively on the work of earlier scientists including Galileo, Kepler, Descartes, and many others. He had important collaborations and correspondences, including with the astronomer Edmond Halley, who paid for the publication of the Principia and whose questions prompted Newton to complete it. He engaged in bitter priority disputes with Leibniz over calculus and with Hooke over gravitation, which reveal how much the ideas he worked with were in circulation rather than springing fully formed from his alone. His own statement about standing on the shoulders of giants reflects his genuine awareness of his intellectual debts.

Common misconception

Newton's interest in alchemy and religion was a strange contradiction with his science.

What to teach instead

For Newton, his physics, his alchemy, and his theology were all parts of a single project: understanding God's creation. He did not see a sharp separation between what we now call science and what we call religion or mysticism. The mechanical world of his physics was for him a demonstration of God's rational order. His alchemy and biblical studies were attempts to understand active principles and divine purposes that lay beyond his mechanics. The separation between science and religion was not as sharp in the seventeenth century as it became later. Newton's interests reflect his time as much as they reveal anything unusual about him personally.

Intellectual Connections
Influenced
Thomas Kuhn
Kuhn's analysis of scientific revolutions and paradigm shifts uses Newton's work as a central example. The Newtonian synthesis was one of the greatest paradigm-creating events in the history of science: it unified planetary astronomy and terrestrial mechanics into a single framework that then guided scientific work for two centuries. Kuhn used the eventual revision of Newtonian mechanics by Einstein as a key example of how a successful paradigm eventually breaks down at its edges and is replaced rather than simply extended.
In Dialogue With
Marie Curie
Marie Curie's discovery of radioactivity was one of the anomalies that contributed to the breakdown of the Newtonian paradigm. Newton's mechanics assumed that atoms were fixed and unchanging: matter was matter. Curie showed that atoms could change, emitting energy in the process. This discovery was part of the revolution in physics that eventually produced quantum mechanics and relativity, which showed that Newton's world picture needed fundamental revision at the atomic scale.
In Dialogue With
Ibn Sina
Ibn Sina represents the Islamic Golden Age scholarship that preserved, commented on, and extended Aristotelian natural philosophy, which was the paradigm that Newton eventually replaced. The medieval European universities that Newton's predecessors studied at drew heavily on Islamic philosophical and scientific texts. Newton's scientific revolution was a revolution against Aristotelian physics as transmitted through Islamic and medieval European scholarship, making Ibn Sina part of the tradition Newton built on and departed from.
In Dialogue With
Adam Smith
Newton was a contemporary of Smith's intellectual predecessors and a major cultural influence on the Enlightenment in which Smith worked. The confidence in reason and in universal laws governing the natural world that Newton's physics inspired extended to social thinkers who hoped to find similar laws governing human society and economy. Smith's search for the natural laws of economic behaviour reflects the broader Newtonian aspiration to find universal laws that govern all domains of reality.
Complements
Robin Wall Kimmerer
Newton and Kimmerer represent complementary approaches to the natural world. Newton's approach, mathematical, law-seeking, reductive, produced extraordinary predictive power but described a nature emptied of agency and relationship. Kimmerer argues that a complete understanding of nature requires recovering the sense of plants and ecosystems as beings in relationship, not only as mechanisms following mathematical laws. Both approaches generate genuine knowledge; the question is what each misses.
In Dialogue With
Nagarjuna
Newton's physics and Nagarjuna's philosophy approach the nature of physical reality from opposite directions and arrive at interestingly related insights. Newton sought fixed mathematical laws governing all matter. Nagarjuna argued that nothing has a fixed, independent nature but arises through interdependence and process. Modern physics, particularly quantum mechanics and general relativity, has moved Newton's fixed, independent particles in a direction that some physicists and philosophers have seen as closer to Nagarjuna's relational, process-based picture of reality.
Further Reading

Richard Westfall's Never at Rest (1980, Cambridge University Press) is the definitive scholarly biography.

For the mechanics

S. Chandrasekhar's Newton's Principia for the Common Reader (1995, Oxford University Press) works through the Principia's arguments mathematically.

For the philosophical context

Alexandre Koyré's From the Closed World to the Infinite Universe (1957, Johns Hopkins) is the most thorough account of the philosophical revolution Newton's work produced.

For the connection to Enlightenment thought

Margaret Jacob's The Newtonians and the English Revolution (1976, Cornell University Press) examines the cultural impact of Newton's science.