I'm reading a biography  of Sir Francis Galton, who attended Trinity College at Cambridge University.  I found amusing the biographer's cautious reference to Sir Isaac Newton as  "one of Trinity College's most distinguished alumni." Wouldn't Newton  rank as the most distinguished alumni? After all, what other Englishman  is as distinguished as Newton (besides Shakespeare, and he didn't go to  college). Newton was calculated to be the most eminent figure in the sciences in  human history in Charles Murray's Human Accomplishment.
Still, when I looked up on Wikipedia  the list of alumni of Trinity, I could see why the writer didn't want to commit  himself. Here are some other Trinity alumni: Francis  Bacon, Niels Bohr, John  Dryden, Thomas  Babington Macaulay,  James Clerk  Maxwell, Vladimir  Nabokov, Bertrand  Russell, Ernest  Rutherford, and William  Makepeace Thackeray! And that's leaving out worthies of the caliber of Arthur  Balfour, G.  H. Hardy, A. A. Milne,  Jawaharlal Nehru, John  Maynard Smith, Lytton  Strachey, and Ludwig  Wittgenstein.
Boy, would diversity activist Jaebadiah  Gardner be sore if he had to attend Trinity instead of merely the U. of  Washington in Seattle, where he still feels oppressed by the statues of Dead  White European Males on campus.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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