“Physics” “the study of nature”
- physis (φύσις), meaning “nature”.
- It entered English through:
- Latin: physica – meaning “natural things” or “natural science”
- Old French: fisique
🔹 2. Islamic Golden Age (8th–14th century)
- Scholars like Ibn al-Haytham (Alhazen) developed optics and the scientific method.
- Preserved and expanded Greek physics and math.
🔹 3. Scientific Revolution (16th–17th century)
Physics becomes a modern science:
- Galileo Galilei – laid the foundation of kinematics, used experiments.
- Isaac Newton – formulated the laws of motion and universal gravitation (Principia, 1687).
- Physics becomes a separate science focused on quantitative laws.
🔹 4. Classical Physics (18th–19th century)
- Electricity, magnetism, thermodynamics, optics.
- Faraday, Maxwell (electromagnetism), Newtonian mechanics dominate.
🔹 5. Modern Physics (20th century–now)
- Quantum mechanics (Planck, Schrödinger, Heisenberg)
- Relativity (Einstein)
- Particle physics, cosmology, solid-state physics, etc.
🧠 Summary
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|---|
| Word origin | Greek physis = “nature” |
| Entered English | via Latin (physica) and Old French |
| Early meaning | Natural philosophy (study of nature) |
| Modern meaning | The science of matter, energy, space, and time, using mathematics and experiments |
| Key figures | Aristotle → Galileo → Newton → Einstein |
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