Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T02:00:41.807Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

XX.—Aristotle, Newton, Einstein

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 February 2012

Extract

IT falls to us this year to commemorate the greatest of men of science, Isaac Newton, on the occasion of the three-hundredth anniversary of his birth. The centuries have not dimmed his fame, and the passage of time is unlikely ever to displace him from the supreme position. His discoveries, however—and this is part of their glory—have not persisted unchanged, but in the hands of his successors have been continually unfolding into fresh evolutions. During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries there was an immense expansion of knowledge, springing directly from his work, and forming ultimately a vast superstructure based on the Newtonian concepts of space, mass, and force. Since 1900 the progress of science has continued, but the development of physics has changed in character: it has become subversive and radical, questioning the traditional assumptions and uprooting the old foundations. In 1915 the Newtonian doctrine of gravitation was superseded by that of Einstein: the divergence between the results of the two theories, so far as concerns the calculation of the movements of the planets, is extremely slight, and indeed, in almost all cases, too small to be detected by observation; but on the question of the essential nature of gravitation, the two conceptions differ completely and are associated with opposite philosophies of the external world. The other great discovery of the present century is the quantum theory, which in its perfected form of quantum-mechanics appeared in 1925: this also is completely irreconcilable with the postulates of Newtonian science.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1943

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

page 234 note * The word cosmology is here used in the sense that is customary in modern scientific writing, not the wider sense in which it is used in Scholastic philosophy.

page 235 note * Acts xix, 34.

page 237 note * “Spatium absolutum, natura sua sine relatione ad externum quodvis, semper manet similare et immobile,” Principia, Schol. ad. Defin.

page 237 note † “In spatio quoad ordinem situs locantur universa,” ibid.

page 237 note ‡ Opticks, Qu. 28.

page 238 note * A Collection of Papers which passed between Mr Leibnitz and Dr Clarke (London, 1717), p. 265.Google Scholar

page 239 note * δύγαμιs, potentia.

page 239 note † ÉyÉρyεία or ÉyÉρyείαέντελέxεια, actus.

page 246 note * Principia, Schol. gener. sub finem.