I’m not sure I would agree with the premise that Aristotle is less important than Einstein. Einstein greatly accelerated several fields of physics. Aristotle has long since been superceded in essentially every field, but his ideas still inform (indirectly) more modern work in logic, ethics, metaphysics, and so on. He was certainly productive, no doubt about that.
Also, there’s no finite set of important solvable problems. Today, the available solvable problems may or may not be in physics, but there are plenty on other fields.
I’m not sure I would agree with the premise that Aristotle is less important than Einstein. [...]
My physics-centric bias is showing! I was comparing Aristotle-as-physicist to Einstein, not comparing Aristotle-as-all-round-smart-guy to Einstein, and I should’ve consciously realized that’s what I was doing.
Also, there’s no finite set of important solvable problems. Today, the available solvable problems may or may not be in physics, but there are plenty on other fields.
I wonder how many of those big, solvable problems there are. It’s not clear there are any (more) big unifying theories to be had in, say, macroeconomics or sociology. What would it mean to be a 21st century Einstein of one of those fields, I wonder?
I wonder how many of those big, solvable problems there are. It’s not clear there are any (more) big unifying theories to be had in, say, macroeconomics or sociology. What would it mean to be a 21st century Einstein of one of those fields, I wonder?
Aristotle in all likelihood was relating ideas that were collected already in his personal library or the Library of Alexandria. The way he wrote about the various topics he did implied that they were coming from other sources.
I’m not sure I would agree with the premise that Aristotle is less important than Einstein. Einstein greatly accelerated several fields of physics. Aristotle has long since been superceded in essentially every field, but his ideas still inform (indirectly) more modern work in logic, ethics, metaphysics, and so on. He was certainly productive, no doubt about that.
Also, there’s no finite set of important solvable problems. Today, the available solvable problems may or may not be in physics, but there are plenty on other fields.
My physics-centric bias is showing! I was comparing Aristotle-as-physicist to Einstein, not comparing Aristotle-as-all-round-smart-guy to Einstein, and I should’ve consciously realized that’s what I was doing.
I wonder how many of those big, solvable problems there are. It’s not clear there are any (more) big unifying theories to be had in, say, macroeconomics or sociology. What would it mean to be a 21st century Einstein of one of those fields, I wonder?
I’d start by looking at these lists.
Aristotle in all likelihood was relating ideas that were collected already in his personal library or the Library of Alexandria. The way he wrote about the various topics he did implied that they were coming from other sources.