Sham S. Misri
Sir Isaac Newton was one of
the wisest men that ever lived, yet he felt that he knew but very little. The
more he learned, the better he saw how much there was still to be learned.
Sir Isaac Newton was a
great thinker. No other man of his time knew so much about the laws of nature;
no other man understood the reasons of things so well as he. He learned by
looking closely at things and by hard study. He was always thinking, and thinking.
One day, Sir
Isaac was lying on the grass under an apple tree. Suddenly an apple that had grown ripe on its branch fell to the
ground by his side.
"What made that
apple fall?" he asked himself.
"It fell because
its stem would no longer hold it to its branch," was his first thought.
But Sir Isaac was not
satisfied with this answer. "Why did it fall toward the ground? Why should
it not fall some other way just as well?" he asked.
"All heavy things
fall to the ground—but why do they? Because they are heavy. That is not a good
reason. For then we may ask why anything is heavy. Why is one thing heavier
than another?"
When he had once begun
to think about this he did not stop until he had reasoned it all out.
Millions of
people had seen apples fall, but it was left for Sir Isaac Newton to ask why
they fall. He explained it in this way:—
"Every object draws
every other object toward it.
"The more matter an
object contains the harder it draws.
"The nearer an
object is to another the harder it draws.
"The harder an
object draws other objects, the heavier it is said to be.
"The earth is many
millions of times heavier than an apple; so it draws the apple toward it
millions and millions of times harder than the apple can draw the other way.
"This is why things
fall, as we say, toward the earth.
"While we know that
every object draws every other object, we cannot know why it does so. We can
only give a name to the force that causes this.
"We call that force
GRAVITATION.
"It is gravitation
that causes the apple to fall.
"It is gravitation
that makes things have weight.
"It is gravitation
that keeps all things in their proper places."
Suppose there was no
such force as gravitation, would an apple fall to the ground? Suppose that
gravitation did not draw objects toward the earth, what would happen?
When he was a very old man he one day said: "I seem to have been only like a boy playing on the seashore. I have amused myself by now and then finding a smooth pebble or a pretty shell, but the great ocean of truth still lies before me unknown and unexplored."
When he was a very old man he one day said: "I seem to have been only like a boy playing on the seashore. I have amused myself by now and then finding a smooth pebble or a pretty shell, but the great ocean of truth still lies before me unknown and unexplored."
It is only the very
ignorant who think themselves very wise.
No comments:
Post a Comment