- #36
EnumaElish
Science Advisor
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The problem is that until rather recently, to be a scientist at all, one had to be a philosopher, and a mathematician, and an alchemist, and could earn bonus points for medicine, law, religious studies, and proper socialization with the church and the ruling classes. Aristoteles was not a physicist, he was a philosopher. Galileo himself was professionally a philosopher (to the Medicis) and mathematician (he taught math at the University of Pisa). If alive today, he'd be an amateur astronomer. Similarly Copernicus earned a living mainly by practicing medicine for the church; he was in equal parts physician, theologian and lawyer as much, if not more than, astronomer.Juan R. said:In the past, Newton was the greatest scientist. He was many times more smart than Einstein. He was popularized, but he was not physicist. When passed away, physicists discovered that was not a physicist, he was alchemist