Reflections on Artificial Intelligence: Issac Newton

In the 21st century, people are beginning to rely on Artificial Intelligence. To what extent eventually for logic and reasoning no one knows.

In the late 17th century and early 20th century, Issac Newton lived. Through his mathematics, he made clear the past, present and future. Because of his calculations, humankind finally could know where a celestial object had been in the deep past, where it would in the present, and where it would be no matter how far in the future. Newton had unlocked knowledge that humankind since it began had lacked until him. Issac Newton’s mind was a kind of “artificial intelligence,” but there was nothing artificial about it. Yet, for his time, his way of thinking was what is now in the 21st century is called Artificial Intelligence.

People in the 21st century now take his intellectual accomplishments casually and for granted. Yet, in his time and for centuries thereafter, the results of his work were and are supremely powerful. There was nothing artificial about his thinking — it was completely natural. His thinking was akin to a computer — what we might describe today as “artificial” intelligence.

Published by Charles Ynfante

Charles Ynfante was and is involved in media. He is an author, whose fiction and non-fiction books can be found at Barnes and Noble, Kobo, Apple Books, Tolino, and Amazon. He wrote book reviews for UCLA the American Indian Culture and Research Journal: Red Man’s in the Warpath: The Image of the “Indian” and Second World War. Vol. 28 (2005) 4. A Zuni Life: A Pueblo Indian in Two Worlds. Vol. 24 (1999) 1. Son of Two Bloods. Vol. 22 (1998) 1. He was a Fellow at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC. He was a previous participant in Hollywood. He has worked with Jack Warden, Sam Elliot, Emilio Delgado, Tim O’Connor, Joe Mantell, James Whitmore, Ned Romero, among others. MGM STUDIOS. Motion Picture: “They Only Come OUT at Night.” (character: Tall Chief). Co-starred with Jack Warden. Written by Al Martinez. Directed by Daryl Duke. Produced by Everett Chambers and Robert Monroe. DAVID WOLPER PRODUCTIONS. Motion Picture: “I Will Fight No More Forever.” (character: Yellow Wolf). He co-starred with Sam Elliot, James Whitmore, Emilio Delgado, Ned Romero, and others. Directed by Richard T. Heffron. Written by Jeb Rosebrook and Theodore Strauss. Produced by David L. Wolper, Stan Margulies, and Malcom Alper. IRWIN ALLEN PRODUCTIONS – Television Show: “Swiss Family Robinson.” (character: Shaman, Jr. One television show). PRDUCERS STUDIO / D.R. PRODUCTIONS. Television Series: “You in Public Service.” (character: one of four). DAVID WOLPER PRODUCTIONS. Motion Picture: “Bigfoot.” (character: John). DANIEL WILSON PRODUCTIONS. Motion Picture: “The Sioux.” (character: Little Hunter). DESORT AND SAM PRODUCTIONS. Television Commercial: “Straw Hat Pizza.” (character: Counter boy). Theater experience: Canterbury Tales (the Merchant). Fiddler on the Roof (Sasha). Othello (Iago). Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (George). Cabaret (Ernest Ludwig). The Fantastics (El Gallo). The Crucible (Governor Danforth). Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead (Horatio). Fiddler on the Roof (Sasha). Boys in the Band (Larry). The Apple Tree (the serpent). You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown (Snoopy). Biedermann and the Firebugs (Sepp). The Agreement (Sal). Suddenly Last Summer (Dr. Sugar). Mad Woman of Chaillot (Dr. Jardin). Blithe Sprit (Dr. Randolph). Night Must Fall (Belsize). Annie Get Your Gun (Sitting Bull).

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