Isaac Newton — "I build my philosophy upon the shoulders of giants."
I build my philosophy upon the shoulders of giants.
I build my philosophy upon the shoulders of giants.
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"We build too many walls and not enough bridges."
"I consider the world as a stage, and the actions of men as a play, in which every one acts a part."
"Can it be by accident that all birds beasts and men have their right side and left side alike shaped (except in their bowels) and just two eyes and no more on either side the face & just two ears on e…"
"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."
"The frame of nature, and the system of the world, we are to observe by the phenomena, and not to frame by imagination."
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No thinker works in isolation — every insight is built atop the accumulated knowledge of those who came before. True intellectual progress is collaborative across time: we inherit frameworks, disprove errors, and extend what previous minds discovered. Claiming sole originality is a delusion; acknowledging predecessors is both honest and strategically wise, since their prior work elevates your starting point far above ground level.
Newton's 1675 letter to rival Robert Hooke contained the actual phrase: 'If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants.' He synthesized Galileo's kinematics, Kepler's planetary laws, and Descartes' mathematics into the Principia (1687). Newton devoured prior literature obsessively and knew his universal gravitation was impossible without those foundations — making this rare humility unusually sincere from history's most celebrated physicist.
The Scientific Revolution (1543–1687) was a cascade of interdependent breakthroughs: Copernicus displaced Earth, Galileo measured motion, Kepler found orbital laws, and Newton unified them. The newly founded Royal Society (1660) formalized the practice of building publicly on shared findings. Print culture had made prior knowledge broadly accessible for the first time, making the metaphor of 'giants' practically literal — accumulated written science was an actual launchpad unavailable to ancient thinkers.
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