Newton
Isaac Newton (1643–1727) was an English mathematician, physicist, and natural philosopher whose work constitutes the most consequential unification of mathematical formalism and physical description in the history of science. He did not merely discover laws; he invented the conceptual architecture within which physical laws could be stated at all. The calculus of fluxions, the axiomatic structure of the Principia, and the methodological program of experimental philosophy together form a system — not a collection of results but an integrated framework for generating, testing, and refining predictions about the physical world. Newton is the prototype of what we now call a systems architect: he built the platform on which classical mechanics, engineering, and much of modern scientific method operate.
The Calculus of Fluxions
Newton developed the calculus of infinitesimal change independently of Leibniz, though from a different conceptual foundation. Where Leibniz treated differentials dx and dy as algebraic quantities amenable to symbolic manipulation, Newton conceived of quantities as "fluent" (flowing) and their rates of change as "fluxions." The geometric intuition was paramount: curves generated by continuous motion, velocities as the rates at which areas accumulate. Newton\s