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Full Idea
Newton works with four fundamental concepts: space, time, matter and force.
Gist of Idea
Newton's four fundamentals are: space, time, matter and force
Source
report of Isaac Newton (Principia Mathematica [1687]) by Bertrand Russell - My Philosophical Development Ch.2
Book Ref
Russell,Bertrand: 'My Philosophical Development' [Routledge 1993], p.12
A Reaction
The ontological challenge is to reduce these in number, presumably. They are, notoriously, defined in terms of one another.
1494 | Thales said water is the first principle, perhaps from observing that food is moist [Thales, by Aristotle] |
22745 | Pherecydes said the first principle and element is earth [Pherecydes, by Sext.Empiricus] |
1497 | For Anaximenes nature is air, which takes different forms by rarefaction and condensation [Anaximenes, by Simplicius] |
614 | Heraclitus said sometimes everything becomes fire [Heraclitus, by Aristotle] |
550 | Anaxagoras said that the number of principles was infinite [Anaxagoras, by Aristotle] |
21383 | The ultimate constituents of reality are the homoeomeries [Anaxagoras, by Vlastos] |
484 | Everything is ultimately a variation of one underlying thing [Diogenes of Apollonia] |
488 | Air is divine, because it is in and around everything, and arranges everything [Diogenes of Apollonia] |
13224 | There couldn't be just one element, which was both water and air at the same time [Aristotle] |
17177 | In nature there is just one infinite substance [Spinoza] |
6421 | Newton's four fundamentals are: space, time, matter and force [Newton, by Russell] |