by David M. Keirsey
Issac Newton, Rational,Mastermind
Issac Newton was a reasonable man as long as he didn't have to suffer
fools. This attitude made him appear as both an arrogant man and
a humble man at the same time. This is not surprising, for
he is one of the iconic examples of the personality temperament, called
Rational,
in particular a Mastermind.
Masterminds are not concerned with ideas, for their own sake, as much as
the Architects,
but rather are interested in ideas for their use and utility in reality.
And Newton had no use for useless or wrong ideas, and for those people
who could not see what was obvious to him. However, Newton saw far
-- farther than anybody else in his age. But he did make one mistake, a
brilliant mistake in a form of simplification, and with that, he, and notably
his followers, opened up the world to reason and the scientific revolution.
"Hypothesis non fingo" meaning "I do not feign a hypothesis" is
Newton's response when asked about what constitutes space. Being
a Rational, he realized that he did not want to, or care to, speculate
beyond what he established by meticulous and precise reasoning. Despite
Newton's scientific humbleness and modesty: his statement is not
exactly
correct. First, he assumed an absolute space, and later Einstein
corrected that. Second, his model of the world was constituted by
"particles", that move continuously in space. Dynamics is
the term for Newton's model, which is the foundation of modern physics.
Part of this model is a form of hypothesis, but much more insidious and
subtle than his first assumption. So subtle, we are grappling with
the problem today more than 300 years later. What Newton assumed,
was essentially a form of reductionism, akin to Pythagoras and his followers,
essentially using Descartes' machine analogy in a precise manner.
The problem, mostly propagated by Newton's followers, is to assume that
the machine analogy is the only form of science. And we are all inheritor's
of Newton's brilliant reduction: gladly so (except
enemies
of the future). For Issac Newton did not see Liebniz's problem.
He had other fish to fry, and he had an interesting method and result that
he had obtained when playing around mathematically with the binomial expansion
using negative or fractional powers. This interesting method, calculus,
makes an interesting assumption: that is, the world is continuous.
Newton applied his new method to the real world, set out in a large degree
in Principia Mathematica, and the rest is history. Laplace's clockwork
universe became a reality. Well, almost.
Actually, according to some modern physicists, they think that the world is made of "strings" -- something akin to Newton's particles, a modern day form of Democritus' atoms. But what is makes a string? Back to Leibniz's dilemma in modern form. Newton, in assuming the notion of a finite "particle" that can exhibit continuous motion, he had assumed the world is discrete and continuous at the same time. The string theorists do the same. Why is a "string," finite (discrete) and the background, infinite (continuous)? It is assumed. That assumption has placed an unnecessary limitation on science. We cannot blame Newton for his mistake for he opened the world to the benefits of rigorous scientific reasoning using mathematics, but it is time to examine the Newtonian paradigm and find methods that do not make this limiting assumption.