Pure innovation, in a world that refuses to innovate, that is the adversity Issac Newton faced during the span of his career, a justly speculative populace, jealous fellow scientists, and a world that simply wasn't advanced enough to accept his ideas. Within eighty four years Newton was peerless in his pursuit of the next great progression, utilizing the tools and ideas of those who came before him and in many cases crafting new ones when the knowledge of yesterday dried up, Newton, even with a life of emotional trauma pushed that all aside for the next step forward. Issac Newton was the definitive purveyor of the most fundamentally human notion of all, the pursuit of knowledge and progress, with this in mind he showcases the greatest flaw …show more content…
Issac Newton was born in Woolsthrope Manor in the United Kingdom to a deceased father and an absentee mother, the fact of which many speculate is tied to his inferiority complex and his need for validation. As Newton grew, he was exposed to the Aristotelianism perspective on the fundamentals of the universe and its within this that his dedication to the truth rather than the narrative sparked, for Newton, though respectful of the notion proceeded to discard the ideas of a geocentric universe in favor of the newer ideas surrounding heliocentricity, in favor of tomorrow's ideas. Newton followed his education through to Cambridge where he continued to express his dedication to with his diversion from the position of focusing solely on Aristotle, to focusing on thinkers like René Descartes who offered differing perspectives that were not commonly accepted in academic sphere. Newton’s interest in philosophy waned leading to his immersion in the world of mathematics, mastering it in less than a year, it is at this point when once again in the face of adversity and unable to utilize the tools at his disposal, Newton created and then employed the use of calculus and revealed its secrets and purpose to the world within a paper entitled On the