On the Shoulders of Giants.

Who was the greatest thinker of all time?
I often ponder this, and Einstein quickly comes
to the forefront of my thinking. However if Newton hadn’t made the great contributions to physics that Einstein built upon, would Einstein’s time have been consumed postulating classical physics?
If this were to be true could the Theory of Relativity yet be realized? Could the equivalent also be argued of Nicolaus Copernicus and Galileo Galilile?

I don’t see how there can be a single “greatest.”

Welcome to the Board, buzzz_kill. Are you looking for the smartest person or the most important innovation? If it’s the former, John von Neumann is a good candidate. He made important or even fundamental contributions to economics, game theory, mathematics, probability theory, weather forcasting, the atomic bomb, computers, physics,…

Aristotle, while he was often wrong, was usually wrong for the right reasons (his geocentric theory, for example, was based on using proper reasoning with faulty information). Because of his contributions for the next several thousand years, he’d be up there.
Thomas Paine would also, even though there was little truly original in his writings.

von Neumann? Pah. Either Turing or Gödel could’ve kicked his butt any day of the week, if brains were butts. Gödel practically invented computer science. Turing came up with the Turing machine and was instrumental in cracking the Nazi’s “Enigma” code during WW2. What was von Neumann’s big contribution? The notion that codes in computer memory could be used to represent machine instructions. (An important idea, to be sure, but Turing or Gödel could’ve came up with an idea like that for breakfast.)

Turing invented computer science. He was heavily influenced by Gödel’s work, but Turing machines are what made computer science possible.

On the practical side, however, von Neumann probably was the most significant contributor. He was the first person to think about storing programs in memory, which is so fundamental these days that I can’t imagine what it would be like otherwise.

Towards the OP, computer science has made a more fundamental change in our method of thinking than anything from physics (except the inception). Traditional science has always been about declarative knowledge–what is true, and what is likely. That’s been going on for a long time. Computer science deals with imperative knowledge–how to do things. This is completely new as of this century.

I enter this thread only to use my sig.

Gotta love Murray, KarlGauss!

The impressive thing about Von Neumann is the variety of fields in which he excelled, in addition to his contributions to computer science.

In addition, he was the first to use scientific models for weather forecasting.

So it’s impressive. But is von Neumann the “greatest thinker of all time?” Is Turing or Gödel or Aristotle?

Greater than Einstein, Hawking, Tesla?

Greater than Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo Buonarotti, Thomas Edison, Ben Franklin?

Greater than Lao-Tzu, Siddhartha Gautama, Jesus of Nazareth?

Damn, I really could go on all night. As an intellectual exercise, I guess it’s fine, but it’s not like the question has an answer.

to say that there was a greatest thinker of all time would be to blame the most important aspects of humanity on one man, and i think that would be a mistake.

that being said, i think if one read’s bell’s book on mathematicians, one quickly believes that they (all) revolutionized the thinking of everyone. twas a bit sensationalistic, if not entirely factual. but good reading. anyway, in mathematics and sciences clearly newton was the frontrunner. inventing the calculus AND classical physics? that’s some pretty heavy stuff right there. not to say that fermat and leibniz couldn’t come up with it on their own (hell, it was archimedes who came up with the basic idea of differential calculus), but when one gets the entire world to believe him, it becomes a lot more interesting.

now, if we think about the greatest thinkers, there are a lot of completely nuts people like my man nikko tesla or blaise pascal, a lot of simply misguided but brilliant people like archimedes or descartes, or just simply brilliant and unrecognized people like fermat and…ahem…ramanujan. which came first, the lucasian professorship of mathematics, or the calculus? clearly, one’s importance to society helps one become more important to society.

anyway, i’m rambling, but i guess if you wanted to figure out who was the most important thinker, one has to determine what the most important development of modern society is. if you think it’s computers, the first computer programmer was actually the daughter of george gordon, lord byron. but i think it’s impossible to place supreme importance on one “revolution” that made us who we are, and clarified that who we are is who we can best be.

hope that’s coherent.
-d

Gotta be Godel.

[…wondering what KarlGauss’s sig is, but lacking the motivation to enable sigs and then redisable them…]

I’ll humor you, lib :smiley:

“If I have seen further than others, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants” - Isaac Newton

“If I have seen further than others, it is because I have been surrounded by midgets” - Murray Gell-Mann

:smiley: Ah, wonderful! Thanks, Qadgop.

If, by “greatest thinker”, yo mean the person whose ideas have had the most broad and lasting effect on later thought, most of the 20[sup]TH[/sup] century is out; there hasn’t been enough time for that sort of influence to be established. Going strictly by the criteria I’ve proposed above, my suggested answer would be Roger Bacon, though it’s probably a fallacy to claim that there’s some sort of absolute pinnacle there.

I’m shocked no one has posted it yet. What single mind is greater than any other in human history?
UNCLE CECIL

I gotta say Shakespeare. I’m more impressed by cultural achievement than technological. Beavers build dams, but they don’t write Hamlet.