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Did Albert Einstein ever know about Isaac Newton?

Mister Apoc

Demigod of Troll Threads
was Newton well known during Einstein's time, or was his legacy discovered later. I always wondered if Einstein knew who Isaac Newton was
 
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He had a picture of him on his wall, so I'm going to say "Yes"

Also James Clerk Maxwell, who IMHO should be remembered at the greatest scientist of all.
 
Ran into Einstein in the john at a Sox game once - I was like "how about that Isaac Newton guy with that gravity stuff - wild" and he was like "huh?" and I said "forget it."

Come to think of it, he had an unusually loud stream, so it's possible he just didn't hear me.
 
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He had a picture of him on his wall, so I'm going to say "Yes"

Also James Clerk Maxwell, who IMHO should be remembered at the greatest scientist of all.
now that i remember you are correct

but i actually believe Einstein never knew that Newton was an englishman, i read somewhere that his whole life he always thought Newton was german
 
They actually met and had pleasant conversations about gravity and coin minting. Einstein would later inspire Planck to develop the theory of the photon. Though some say he was actually inspired by the work of Feynman and Salam.
 
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Able Lincoln was assassinated in 1865. the first edition of Dracula would not be released until 1897. so we can say for sure he did not know about Dracula. but it is likely he knew about vampires, as they had been popular in fiction & legend for centuries, and Lincoln was an avid life-long reader. he belonged to no church, preferring to believe in his own personal idea of God, so he comes across as somewhat of a free thinker. he was self-taught. it's not a leap to say he was familiar with supernatural fiction, like many other Americans of the 19th century. Spiritualism (seances, Ouija boards, poltergeists, etc.) was a big cultural movement that began in the 1840s (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiritualism#Origins). popular interest in the supernatural, non-traditional religions, and folk beings was at an all-time high, helped no doubt by the publishing of all kinds of books on the matter.

Einstein knew about Newton. a great deal of what Einstein brought to science had major implications for the classical physics that were popularized by Newton. Newton helped lay the foundations for classical mechanics. Einstein sort of smashed that with a hammer, introducing the atomic age, the weirdness of quantum dynamics, etc. he started his career by reacting to Newtonian physics, coming up with E=MC^2. Newton is essential to the Einstein story. he is like Einstein's familiar.

the real question is DO YOU know about Isaac Newton. he's a fascinating motherfucker. he wrote books on light and sound, he studied alchemy and biblical chronology. his religious views, considered heretical by some at the time, were quite in line with the intellectuals of the late medieval & early Renaissance. the practical inquisition into all facets of life, the search for all knowledge, the Philosopher's Stone, kabbalah, astrology, and magic were all parts of this free line of inquiry that predated what we now know as "science".
 
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anything seems un natural, or couldn't be explained was evil back then. Hell if you went back in time and showed them most of the stuff we have now, they would just hang you for being a witch.
 
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