Newton sent 22 men to the gallows
and attended the "liturgies".
TRUE? FALSE?
Sir Isaac
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1- loner, few close friends, 
spent much time alone, 
unmarried, no children, no known romance. 
2- powers of concentration legendary
for days at at time, 
often refusing food. 
3- low self esteem 
depressed as if indulging in a private vice, 
nervous breakdown is consistent.
This fast portrait of Newton, found on Internet, is an excellent departure of thesis. Good description of the individual. But the social phenomenon was a continuous enthusiasm since Locke to our days. Poincaré, always obsessed by the brain of Isaac till the vigil of his death, forgot the living Newton close to him:
If Albert and Raymond had met ,
the face of the earth had been changed.
Therefore, you read my "Locke". And I let to Peter Gay, (I would like to have more time to read his books), the care to describe the phenomenon Newton.
I add:
1 / Newton, among the creators of noodigms (Darwin, Einstein), was the most complete: he created the synthesis and the language, (sign and necessity of any noodigm), a mathematic. Explanation? 2 / the French mathematicians, d'Alembert, Lagrange, Laplace,... made a lot to formalize, (to 'divinise"?), the Newtonian thought, (thank'em? Locke could not do that). But they  cause a rigidity and a 'resistance' of science against Einstein's thrust...
3 / Newton helped me to determine what would be, (or is already?), the "successful prosopamnesian". This language could surprise those that have not yet seized the noologic mechanic. As, by Einsteinian interdiction, no conclusion is definitive, (it would block all possible next progress), I can propose the theory, then the conclusion. Or only the last one, as a provocation to "break", to provoke a new jump.

4 / A true scientist restarts, produces more, and not in the same domain:

4.1 philosophy

Rule V (found in his papers), would be sufficient to show the philosophical level and the advance of Newton:

(Locke can come! Now, Popper is to Einstein what Locke was to Newton: AND I can find the same ideas in the thesis of Popper, (1933), and in letters of Einstein of 1922).

4.2 Optic:
Galilee didn't invent the telescope. He pretended it and was believed, but the telescope of Galilee (concave and convex lentils) comes from Dutchmen and the telescope (to the own sense, with convex mirror) comes from Newton. (J.P. Lentin, "Je pense donc je suis", page 52 (Albin Michel, 1994).

Therefore, temporary theory to manufacture geniuses,
(that gave results already through "prosopamnesia"):
- 1 / a childhood assuring the minimum,
- 2 / but a drama, loss, abandonment by a parent,
- 3 / with possibility to fight, to affirm oneself,
- 4 / then, a "locomotive"...
This theory becomes important just at the time when the neo-satammism pushes the disarray in millions of families...

Do you accept to participate in a research on the future education, on the manufacture of my small NewSteins?
. I, for one, bring two strong points:
- my incredible formation in the frame of "Uncle Cardinal's Plan":
- my discharge of all paternal loads by the agonising satammism...

Therefore,

"Ancestors of all children to be born,
let's unite ourselves against Satammism"!
-

. 1 / a childhood assuring the minimum
It seems that Isaac was saved by his mother:

Today, this problem is still badly resolute pain since "runts" make themselves a room in the world, Napo-Lycaon, Francoco, and other sons of the devil. Among the first million of NewStein, there will be a lot of these runts, but True God knows what he does.

Points remaining to be to developped:

. Peter Gay, "The Enlightment", Norton, 1969

THE ENLIGHTMENT'S ENTANGLEMENT with science is pervaded with ironies. The philosophes celebrated the scientific revolution, accepted its findings, and imitated its methods. They pushed its philosophical implications far beyond what the scientists themselves would have thought warranted. They tried to apply the scientific style of thinking to the regions of aesthetic, social, and political theory... In the age of the Enlightenment, that great time of discovery consolidation, and triumphant popularizing, it did not take unusual perspicacity to recognize the scientific revolution as an extraordinary event. It was plain that this revolution was the most far-reaching upheaval the West had experienced since the Protestant
Reformation, indeed more far-reaching: the discoveries of Galileo and Boyle and Newton were changing the world more drastically than it had been changed by the doctrines of Luther and Calvin.
The spectacular intellectual conquests of astronomers and physicists made science interesting to many, and not to philosophes alone: the philosophes might think themselves privileged admirers, but in fact science had many other courtiers in the age of the Enlightenment; indeed, when Rousseau denigrated the sciences in his first Discours, it was the Jesuit Journal de Trévoux that defended them against this eloquent slanderer. The philosophers welcomed the widespread passion for science, the mass of popular explanations of abstruse theories, the new scientific journals but, as men of letters, they were also a little uneasy about it. In 1735 Voltaire, on a short visit to Paris from Cerney, complained that

"verses are hardly fashionable any longer."
everybody has begun to play at being the geometer and the physicist"...
The philosophers saw  the new science as an irresistible force and enlisted it in their polemics, identifying themselves with sound method, progress, success, the future. They had a certain right to their acquisitiveness.

We are inclined to think of the scientists among the philosophes as literary men with a scientific vocation, but, in fact,practically all the philosophers with serious scientific interests -Maupertuis, Buffon, d'Alembert, Lichtenberg, Franklin, Kant, Condorcet- began with science before they turned to philosophy, and the intelligent amateurs and popularizes among them -Voltaire and Diderot among others- did not have far to go to consult the experts; some of their best friends were mathematicians, physicists, and astronomers. But the philosophers' seizure of science was a far from untroubled affair.
As the sciences grew more technical, more professional, they developed autonomously, and confronted the philosophes, eager as they were to turn knowledge into politics, with linguistic, ethical, and metaphysical difficulties they had not anticipated and for which most of them were ill-prepared.Hume and d'Alembert, Condillac and Kant thought about the philosophical implications of the sciences fruitfully and constructively; they set the terms on which the debate over the nature of science is still conducted today.
But there were other philosophers who, as the eighteenth century progressed, found science to be not a servant or an ally but an embarrassment.

Newton was a congenial kind of hero for the philosophes: when Voltaire set the fashion for the Enlightenment by calling Newton the greatest man who ever lived, he contrasted him, significantly, with the heroes that had served earlier, more bellicose ages: "If true greatness consists of having been endowed by heaven with powerful genius, and of using it to enlighten oneself and others then a man like M. Newton (we scarcely find one like him in ten centuries) is truly the great man, and those politicians and conquerors (whom no century has been without) are generally nothing but celebrated villains."

Everything co-operated to make Newton into a fitting object of a mystique. He was eccentric and fallible enough to provide memorable stories-like the imperishable anecdote about Newton meditating on fruit dropping from his trees which Voltaire brought back with him from England. Equipped with penetrating vision where others had seen nothing, unsurpassed and unsurpassable in his achievement, too preoccupied and too aloof to conduct his own polemics, Newton had unified disparate phenomena, laid bare age-old secrets, and, with one almost incredible intellectual effort, compelled nature to order. He had been a visionary disciplined by the appeal to experience, an empiricist illuminated by profound vision, a pioneer who employed all weapons in the scientific arsenal-mathematics, experiment, observation -with equal ease. Such a giant did more than invite assent to his theories; he commanded submission. By mid-century, d'Alembert noted, Newton's system was "so generally accepted, that people were beginning to dispute their author the honour of having discovered it," and in 1776 Voltaire surprised no one when he announced, quite simply,

"We are all his disciples now.'

Even the Cartesians were irresistibly drawn into the circle of admiration: Fontenelle composed his eulogy for the Académie des sciences on the occasion of Newton's death as though he were in the presence of a towering natural force: what a marvellous mathematician, he exclaimed, to have unravelled the mysterious complexities of the universe!

Newton sort la philosophie des Dark Ages!