Very persuasive article.  The conclusion can be argued with, but who  do you
suggest as an alternative?  Best I can do is to suggest some other  
candidates
for smartest person in history:  Teddy Roosevelt, Thomas Jefferson,  Edison,
Alexander Graham Bell, maybe Buckminster Fuller, and a few others.
Anyway, a thoughtful essay.
 
BR
 
-----------------------------
 
 
 
 
Newton Blog
 
The Smartest Person Who Ever Lived
Posted by _Alex B.  Berezow_ 
(http://www.realclearscience.com/authors/alex_b_berezow/)  January 26, 2015


Who was the smartest person to ever live? There are certainly many worthy  
contenders. Today, the very name of "Einstein" is synonymous with genius. 
Others  may suggest Stephen Hawking. Those who appreciate literature and music 
may  proffer William Shakespeare or Ludwig van Beethoven. Historians may 
recommend  Benjamin Franklin. 
Before I submit my own suggestion, we must first discuss what we even mean 
by  smart. Colloquially, we routinely interchange the words smart  and 
intelligent, but they are not necessarily the same thing. There is  an ongoing 
debate among psychologists, neuroscientists, and artificial  intelligence 
experts on what intelligence actually is, but for our purposes  here, a simple 
_dictionary  definition_ 
(http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/intelligence)  will suffice: "capacity 
for learning, reasoning, understanding,  and 
similar forms of mental activity; aptitude in grasping truths,  relationships, 
facts, meanings, etc."
 
Implicit in this definition of intelligence is general knowledge. An  
intelligent person capable of understanding quantum mechanics is useless to  
society if he is completely ignorant. So, a truly smart person will know a lot  
of things, preferably about many different topics. He should be a  polymath, 
in other words. 
Finally, there is the element of creativity. Creative people think  in ways 
in which most other people do not. Where society sees a dead end, a  
creative person sees an opportunity. 
Which person from history was the bodily manifestation of intelligence,  
knowledge, and creativity? Our blog's namesake, Isaac Newton, of course! 
What was Newton's IQ? It's impossible to say. IQ tests didn't exist in the  
17th Century, and if they had, Mr. Newton certainly would not have deigned 
to  spend 90 minutes filling out ovals on a multiple choice test. Besides, 
he likely  would have finished the test early and then spent the remaining 
time correcting  errors and devising more difficult questions. 
Nobody doubts that Isaac Newton was an intelligent man, but he also 
exhibited  in spades the two other characteristics outlined above: knowledge 
and  
creativity. 
Newton was a true polymath. Not only did he master physics and mathematics, 
 but he was also a theologian. He was obsessed with eschatology (end-times  
prophecy), and he calculated -- based on his interpretation of the Bible -- 
that  _Jesus  Christ would return to Earth in 2060_ 
(http://www.realclearscience.com/blog/2012/12/isaac-newton-believed-in-ghosts.html)
 . His 
dedication to religion was so  great that, _according  to Nature_ 
(http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v430/n7002/full/430819a.html) , more than 
half of his 
published writings were on  theology. 
He also became well versed in alchemy. Do not hold that against him. Many  
great scientists of his time believed that any metal could be transmuted 
into  gold. The Economist _explains_ (http://www.economist.com/node/18226821)  
why the notion was  not entirely unreasonable in Newton's time: 
Alchemical theories were not stupid. For instance,  lead ore often contains 
silver and silver ore often contains gold, so the idea  that lead 'ripens' 
into silver, and silver into gold, is certainly worth  entertaining. The 
alchemists also discovered some elements, such as  phosphorous. 
Furthermore, later in life, Newton dabbled in economics. James Gleick, 
author  of the truly excellent biography _Isaac  Newton_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Isaac-Newton-James-Gleick/dp/1400032954) , wrote that 
"[h]e wrestled with 
issues of unformed monetary  theory and international currency." As Master of 
the Mint, Newton was tasked  with tracking down currency counterfeiters, 
which he did, as Gleick wrote, "with  diligence and even ferocity." He showed 
no pity in his relentless pursuit of  justice. When notorious counterfeiter 
William Chaloner attacked Newton's  personal integrity, he doubled down his 
efforts to catch him. Mental  Floss _reports_ 
(http://mentalfloss.com/article/13035/isaac-newton-17th-century-london’s-dirty-harry)
 : 
Acting more the grizzled sheriff than an esteemed  scientist, Newton bribed 
crooks for information. He started making threats. He  leaned on the wives 
and mistresses of Chaloner's crooked associates. In short,  he became the 
Dirty Harry of 17th-century London. 
Newton's sleuthing worked. Chaloner was caught and hanged. 
Impressive as all that, what truly separates Newton from other luminaries 
was  his unparalleled creativity. He created multiple tools that simply never 
existed  before. For example, in order to study acceleration, the change in 
velocity, a  tool beyond basic algebra was required. That tool, called the 
derivative, is the  most basic function in calculus. It didn't exist in the 
17th Century. Newton  invented it. 
In order to find the area beneath a curve, another tool beyond basic 
algebra  was needed. That tool, called integration, is the second most basic 
function in  calculus. Like the derivative, it did not exist in the 17th 
Century. 
So, Newton  invented it. He also invented a _reflecting telescope_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newtonian_telescope)   and the ridges on coins, 
which 
serve as an _anti-theft  measure_ 
(http://lsned.com/facts/newton-invented-ridges-coins/)  that prevents "_coin  
clipping_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methods_of_coin_debasement) ." 
Newton's inventiveness is perhaps best summarized by the epigraph to 
Gleick's  biography, which was written by his niece's husband in 1726: 
I asked him where he had it made, he said he made  it himself, & when I 
asked him where he got his tools said he made them  himself & laughing added if 
I had staid for other people to make my tools  & things for me, I had never 
made anything... 
Sadly, despite his fame, Isaac Newton led a very lonely life. His  
incomparable brilliance came at a hefty cost; his reclusive and anti-social  
nature 
strongly suggest that he was autistic, and his obsessive and disagreeable  
nature suggest mental illness, perhaps obsessive-compulsive disorder. Mental  
Floss not-so-charitably _describes_ 
(http://mentalfloss.com/article/12500/11-historical-geniuses-and-their-possible-mental-disorders)
   Newton as 
suffering from "everything": 
[H]istorians agree he had a lot going on. Newton  suffered from huge ups 
and downs in his moods, indicating bipolar disorder,  combined with psychotic 
tendencies. His inability to connect with people could  place him on the 
autism spectrum. He also had a tendency to write letters filled  with mad 
delusions, which some medical historians feel strongly indicates  
schizophrenia. 
The more I study Isaac Newton, the more fascinating he becomes. In my  
opinion, the genius of the precocious boy from Woolsthorpe has never been, nor  
ever will be, surpassed.

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