Isaac Newton — "Errors are not in the art but in the artificers."
Errors are not in the art but in the artificers.
Errors are not in the art but in the artificers.
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"He who thinks half-heartedly will not believe in God; but he who thinks seriously will believe in God, and will not doubt that God is the author of the world."
"To every action there is always opposed an equal reaction."
"No great discovery was ever made without a bold guess."
"A man may imagine things that are false, but he can only understand things that are true, for if the things be false, the apprehension of them is not understanding."
"God is the same God, always and everywhere. He is omnipresent not virtually only, but also substantially; for virtue cannot subsist without substance."
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Mistakes don't come from the discipline or method itself — they come from the people applying it. The art, meaning the craft, science, or system, is inherently sound; what goes wrong is human imperfection, carelessness, or misapplication. Don't blame the tool or field when something fails — look at the practitioner who misunderstood or misused it. Accountability belongs to the person, not the process.
Newton believed natural laws were perfect and immutable — gravity and motion operated without flaw. His fierce disputes with Leibniz, Hooke, and Flamsteed consistently centered on who had erred in calculation or method, never on whether mathematics itself was defective. His obsessive precision in the Principia reflected a core conviction that practitioners must be rigorous enough to be worthy of the discipline they claim to practice.
Newton worked during the 17th-century Scientific Revolution, when natural philosophy was separating from medieval superstition and establishing repeatable methodology. The Royal Society, founded in 1660, explicitly aimed to filter credible inquiry from charlatanism. Alchemists, astrologers, and frauds still operated alongside legitimate investigators, making the distinction between a sound method and a careless practitioner a live and urgent question that shaped how Enlightenment thinkers defined reliable knowledge.
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