Britain

 
The Times       November 24, 2005

Newton trounces Einstein in vote on their relative merits
By Mark Henderson, Science Correspondent

HIS most famous equation, E=mc², is 100 years old, and 2005 has been named 
Einstein 
Year in his honour, but Albert Einstein has been trounced in a scientific 
beauty contest 
held to celebrate his own greatest achievements.
The most famous head of hair in science was soundly beaten by Sir Isaac Newton 
yesterday in a poll on the relative merits of their breakthroughs, with both 
scientists and 
the public favouring the Englishman by a surprisingly wide margin.

Asked by the Royal Society to decide which of the two made the more important 
contributions to science, 61.8 per cent of the public favoured the claims of 
the 17th-
century scientist who developed calculus and the theory of gravity. Among 345 
Royal 
Society scientists who voted, the margin of support for Newton was greater 
still, with 86.2 
per cent deciding that his work was more important than Einstein's. The vote 
was closer 
over who made a bigger positive contribution to humankind in general. Newton 
was again 
twice the winner, but with only 50.1 per cent of the public vote and 60.9 per 
cent of the 
specialists'.

The results of the online poll were revealed last night at a Royal Society 
debate on the two 
physicists' claims to being the greatest of all. Sir Isaac was a elected a 
fellow of the society 
in 1672, while Einstein was voted a Foreign Member in 1921.

The poll was held as part of the celebrations of Einstein Year, which marks the 
German-
born scientist's annus mirabilis of 1905, when he published three papers that 
laid the 
foundation of modern physics.

Along with the special theory of relativity and its signature E=mc² equation, 
Einstein 
proved the existence of atoms and explained how light could have the properties 
of both 
waves and streams of particles.

Jim Al-Khalili, a professor at the University of Surrey, who proposed Einstein 
at the debate 
last night, said: "Within just a few months during 1905, Einstein published 
several papers 
that were to change the face of physics. He proved mathematically that atoms 
exist. He 
proved that light is lumpy. It is made up of tiny particles we now call photons 
and not 
continuous waves. He then published two papers on his theory of relativity, 
giving us a 
new view of reality itself."

Einstein should also be favoured, he said, for finding the gaps in Sir Isaac's 
theories. "He 
explained that Newton was wrong about the meaning of space and time," Professor 
Al-
Khalili said.

Sir John Enderby, Emeritus Professor of Physics at Bristol University and 
Vice-President of 
the Royal Society, argued Sir Isaac's corner. He said that Principia, Sir 
Isaac's great work, 
was a foundation stone of the modern scientific method.

Sir John said: "This book set out the mathematical principles of `natural 
philosophy' and 
showed how a universal force, gravity, applied to all objects in all parts of 
the Universe.

"This amazing insight once and for all ruled out the belief that somehow laws 
related to 
Earth-bound objects were in some sense inferior to those which governed the 
heavens."

Lord May of Oxford, the president of the Royal Society, said: "Many would say 
that 
comparing Newton and Einstein is like comparing apples and oranges, but what 
really 
matters is that people are appreciating the huge amount that both these 
physicists 
achieved, and that their impact on the world stretched far beyond the 
laboratory and the 
equation."

THE RESULTS

Royal Society scientists

Newton 86.2%
Einstein 13.8%

Members of the public

Newton 61.8%
Einstein 38.2%







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