Completely agree. The lack of anything between Socrates and Copernicus alone shows the distinct bias of the list. Not a single Scholastic? No mention of achievements outside of hard science or mathematics. If the author specified that as his area of focus, we might be able to have a more profitable discussion.
I've received a fair few suggestions on insights in the humanities which I'm currently writing up to add to the post. I considered some of the Scholastics but felt that they hadn't had an impact on modern thought in the same ways as most of the others (which is a relatively good proxy for "correctness", which is one component of being "great", which is a bad metric but I have to draw the line somewhere). Would you disagree?
Also, I agree that there are some amazing artistic achievements. To keep things concise, I wasn't focusing on them here (I'll make that explicit now).
Completely agree. The lack of anything between Socrates and Copernicus alone shows the distinct bias of the list. Not a single Scholastic? No mention of achievements outside of hard science or mathematics. If the author specified that as his area of focus, we might be able to have a more profitable discussion.
I've received a fair few suggestions on insights in the humanities which I'm currently writing up to add to the post. I considered some of the Scholastics but felt that they hadn't had an impact on modern thought in the same ways as most of the others (which is a relatively good proxy for "correctness", which is one component of being "great", which is a bad metric but I have to draw the line somewhere). Would you disagree?
Also, I agree that there are some amazing artistic achievements. To keep things concise, I wasn't focusing on them here (I'll make that explicit now).
How do you define modern thought? How do you measure impact on it?