this post was submitted on 17 Jun 2024
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Yeah, no.
Newton was such a complex human. He seemed capable of holding many, sometimes opposing beliefs, at the same time.
There's even a Wikipedia page dedicated to his religious beliefs.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_views_of_Isaac_Newton
If you are into learning about him there's also a rather good read, The Janus Faces of Genius, by Betty Jo Teeter Dobbs, that looks into his occult work.
Furthermore, for the sake of complexity, we can look into how, when he was the warden of the mint, he became responsible for the deaths of 19 people. He turned a largely ceremonial role into a task force, chasing down forgers and sentencing them to death.
Man, it was miles better when I just knew him as the motion guy back in primary school
Petition to edit all textbooks, renaming Newton as THE Motion Guy.
All in favor of the emotional motion guy motion petition to move forward unless acted on by an equal and opposite motion say aye.
Because God, to be the absolute creator and the prime mover, He must occupy an absolute space.
Newton had described a universe where, when you push a ball, the ball pushes back. Each action, each motion, is relative to another. This implies that, for God to create the first motion, like rolling the Universe across the room, the Universe would have pushed back and moved God.
Newton didn't believe this, and rejected the argument that his theories disproved God. But there is a reason we remember his laws of physics and forget the theological arguments. His work in physics held up to scrutiny for hundreds of years. He was accurately (enough) describing the motion of the world around him. His religious beliefs were based on the same philosophical musings and wishful thinking as every other theologian.
Well, two things. First, this Absolute Space concept was something Newton believed, and even though some people believe his laws of motion disprove Absolute Space, Newton didn't believe his laws contradicted Absolute Space. He definitely didn't think his laws concluded that God can't be real.
But as for your example, the question remains "from where?" Setting two things in motion doesn't resolve the issue that there is an equal and opposite reaction. It just means now there are two of them. And if we assume that the laws of the universe do not apply outside the universe, we must also presume that there is a space outside of the universe with its own properties and its own laws. And then therefore there must be a space where the two spaces intersect so that one might affect the other. At that intersection, the universe where physics apply would be acting on the external-space where physics don't apply. If the universe did not affect the external space, it would violate Newton's laws. If it did, it would violate the laws of the external space.
It's an unresolvable conflict, or at least it was during Newton's time. Today, we understand that Newton's description of physics was accurate on a macro level, roughly describing motion and energy in basic terms. I don't know if Quantum Physics or Astrophysics can resolve the conflict. It's not important to me whether or not it is possible for Absolute Space to exist, nor is it important to disprove the possibility of its existence. But I would say that we should follow the science to explore the universe, wherever that leads us. If that means we shed some previously held beliefs, then that's reality for ya.
It would be comforting to think there exists a divine arbiter and prime creator that wants us to be good and happy, and to imagine we get to hang out with our loved ones when we die. I can understand why so many people want to hold on to those concepts. I just don't think the universe is that small or unimpressive.
I am an engineer but even I felt insulted on behalf of mathematicians when you referred to him as the motions guy 😭
Eh, Leibniz can be the calculus guy.
We use Leibniz's calculus anyway, and both were developed at the same time, prompted by the same paper. Newton just happened to publish first (I think) and was more well known at the time.
Hi, I'm Issac Newton, you might remember me from... The motions.
You just had an emotion, which was the result from an opposite emotion.