1643-1727, English mathematician, physicist, and natural philosopher

three laws of motion: inertia, F=ma, action-reaction, the foundation of classical mechanics

law of universal gravitation: every mass attracts every other mass with force proportional to the product of masses and inversely proportional to distance squared

co-invented calculus (independently of Leibniz), providing the mathematical language for continuous change

optics: demonstrated white light is a composite of spectral colors using prism experiments

Principia Mathematica (1687): unified terrestrial and celestial mechanics under a single mathematical framework

Master of the Royal Mint, reforming English coinage and currency standards

laid the groundwork for the entire edifice of physics that Albert Einstein later extended with relativity

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