Newton’s Laws of Emotion
The first time Isaac Newton got hit in the face, he was standing in a field. His uncle had been
explaining to him why wheat should be planted in diagonal rows, but Isaac wasn’t listening. He
was gazing into the sun, wondering what the light was made of.
He was seven years old.
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His uncle backhanded him so hard across his left cheek that Isaac’s sense of self temporarily
broke upon the ground on which his body fell. He lost any feeling of personal cohesion. And as
the parts of his psyche put themselves back together, some secret piece of himself remained in
the dirt, left behind in a place from which it would never be recovered.
Isaac’s father had died before he was born, and his mother soon abandoned her son to marry
some old rich guy the next village over. As a result, Isaac spent his formative years being
shuffled among uncles, cousins, and grandparents. No one particularly wanted him. Few knew
what to do with him. He was a burden. Love came difficultly, and usually not at all.
Isaac’s uncle was an uneducated drunk, but he did know how to count hedges and rows in
fields. It was his one intellectual skill, and because of this, he did it probably more often than he
needed to. Isaac often tagged along to these row-counting sessions because it was the only time
his uncle ever paid attention to him. And like water in a desert, any attention the boy got he
desperately soaked in.
As it turned out, the boy was a kind of prodigy. By age eight, he could project the amount of
feed required to sustain the sheep and pigs for the following season. By nine, he could rattle off
the top of his head calculations for hectares of wheat, barley, and potatoes.
By age ten, Isaac had decided that farming was stupid and instead turned his attention to
calculating the exact trajectory of the sun throughout the seasons. His uncle didn’t care about the
exact trajectory of the sun because it wouldn’t put food on the table—at least not directly—so,
again, he hit Isaac.
School didn’t make things any better. Isaac was pale and scrawny and absentminded. He
lacked social skills. He was into nerdy shit like sundials, Cartesian planes, and determining
whether the moon was actually a sphere. While the other kids played cricket or chased one
another through the woods, Isaac stood staring for hours into local streams, wondering how the
eyeball was capable of seeing light.
Isaac Newton’s early life was one hit after another. And with each blow, his Feeling Brain
learned to feel an immutable truth: that there must be something inherently wrong with him. Why
else would his parents have abandoned him? Why else would his peers ridicule him? What other
explanation for his near-constant solitude? While his Thinking Brain occupied itself drawing
fanciful graphs and charting the lunar eclipses, his Feeling Brain silently internalized the
knowledge that there was something fundamentally broken about this small English boy from
Lincolnshire.
One day, he wrote in his school notebook, “I am a little fellow. Pale and weak. There is no
room for me. Not in the house or in the bottom of hell. What can I do? What am I good for? I
cannot but weep.”
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Up until this point, everything you’ve read about Newton is true—or at least highly plausible.
But let’s pretend for a moment that there’s a parallel universe. And let’s say that in this parallel
universe there is another Isaac Newton, much like our own. He still comes from a broken and
abusive family. He still lives a life of angry isolation. He still prodigiously measures and
calculates everything he encounters.
But let’s say that instead of obsessively measuring and calculating the external, natural
world, this Parallel Universe Newton decides to obsessively measure and calculate the internal,
psychological world, the world of the human mind and heart.
This isn’t a huge leap of the imagination, as the victims of abuse are often the keenest
observers of human nature. For you and me, people-watching may be something fun to do on a
random Sunday in the park. But for the abused, it’s a survival skill. For them, violence might
erupt at any moment, therefore, they develop a keen Spidey sense to protect themselves. A lilt in
someone’s voice, the rise of an eyebrow, the depth of a sigh—anything can set off their internal
alarm.
So, let’s imagine this Parallel Universe Newton, this “Emo Newton,” turned his obsession
toward the people around him. He kept notebooks, cataloging all the observable behaviors of his
peers and family. He scribbled relentlessly, documenting every action, every word. He filled
hundreds of pages with inane observations of the kind of stuff people don’t even realize they do.
Emo Newton hoped that if measurement could be used to predict and control the natural world,
the shapes and configurations of the sun and moon and stars, then it should also be able to
predict and control the internal, emotional world.
And through his observations, Emo Newton realized something painful that we all kind of
know, but that few of us ever want to admit: that people are liars, all of us. We lie constantly and
habitually.
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We lie about important things and trifling things. And we usually don’t lie out of
malice—rather, we lie to others because we’re in such a habit of lying to ourselves.
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Isaac noted that light refracted through people’s hearts in ways that they themselves did not
seem to see; that people said they loved those whom they appeared to hate; professed to believe
one thing while doing another; imagined themselves righteous while committing acts of the
grandest dishonesty and cruelty. Yet, in their own minds, they somehow believed their actions to
be consistent and true.
Isaac decided that no one could be trusted. Ever. He calculated that his pain was inversely
proportional to the distance squared he put between himself and the world. Therefore, he kept to
himself, staying in no one’s orbit, spinning out and away from the gravitational tug of any other
human heart. He had no friends; nor, he decided, did he want any. He concluded that the world
was a bleak, wretched place and that the only value to his pathetic life was his ability to
document and calculate that wretchedness.
For all his surliness, Isaac certainly didn’t lack ambition. He wanted to know the trajectory of
men’s hearts, the velocity of their pain. He wished to know the force of their values and the mass
of their hopes. And most important, he wanted to understand the relationships among all these
elements.
He decided to write Newton’s Three Laws of Emotion.
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