If your referring to the 3 laws of newton, the first is that objects at rest tend to stay at rest unless a new force acts upon it, the second is f=ma, or objects in motion tend to stay in motion unless an opposing force acts upon it, and last and possibly most well known (if not in definition then in experience) is that every action has an opposite equal reaction.
A) What goes up must come down. The three laws Sir Isaac Newton's three laws of motion describe the motion of massive bodies and how they interact. While Newton's laws may seem obvious to us today, more than three centuries ago they were considered revolutionary. What Are Newton's Three Laws of Motion? Newton's First Law of Motion (Law of Inertia) Newton's Second Law of Motion (Law of Mass and Acceleration) Newton's Third Law of Motion
These laws are referred to as Newton's laws because Sir Isaac Newton came up with them. They are named for their creator.
Gottfried Liebniz and Isaac Newton are credited with co-developing the Calculus, based on work from Archimedes, Cavalieri, and others. But only Newton also studied gravity, and attempted to come up with a theory about how and why it worked.
The theory of universal gravitation
Sir Isaac Newton is the scientist credited with formulating the law of gravity. His work on gravity and laws of motion were published in his book "Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica" in 1687.
Isaac Newton thought of the three laws of motion while watching an apple fall from a tree.
A) What goes up must come down. The three laws Sir Isaac Newton's three laws of motion describe the motion of massive bodies and how they interact. While Newton's laws may seem obvious to us today, more than three centuries ago they were considered revolutionary. What Are Newton's Three Laws of Motion? Newton's First Law of Motion (Law of Inertia) Newton's Second Law of Motion (Law of Mass and Acceleration) Newton's Third Law of Motion
Isaac Newton developed the laws of motion by observing and analyzing the motion of objects and formulating mathematical equations to describe their behavior. He published his findings in his book "Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy" in 1687.
These laws are referred to as Newton's laws because Sir Isaac Newton came up with them. They are named for their creator.
Newton
The simplest answer is: Without Newton's laws of motion and of universal gravitation, there wouldn't be any modern science. So in that sense, modern science owes its life to Newton's laws. You could paraphrase Newton's own words and come up with a very appropriate answer to this question: Modern science sees as far as it does only because it stands on the shoulders of the giant Newton.
Sir Isaac Newton came up with the Three Laws of Motion
Gravity...he discovered the principle of "what goes up must come down."
He came up with them by thinking deeply and obsessively. Sir Isaac newton was a genius, perhaps the greatest genius the world has ever known. After inventing the eponymous fig-filled pastry-like cookie -- the Fig Newton -- he yearned for more difficult challenges and turned his attention to physics, writing the Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica, a three-volume work published in July, 1687. It contains the statement of Newton's laws of motion and his law of universal gravitation.
He came up with them by thinking deeply and obsessively. Sir Isaac newton was a genius, perhaps the greatest genius the world has ever known. After inventing the eponymous fig-filled pastry-like cookie -- the Fig Newton -- he yearned for more difficult challenges and turned his attention to physics, writing the Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica, a three-volume work published in July, 1687. It contains the statement of Newton's laws of motion and his law of universal gravitation.
oh have forgotte
because he came up with the theroy of gravity and the laws of motion