The Age of Reason is left the Dark Ages of the history of mechanics.
Clifford A. Truesdell) 1. 1 THE INVISIBLE TRUTH OF CLASSICAL PHYSICS
There are some questions that physics since the days of Newton simply
cannot an- swer. Perhaps the most important of these can be categorized
as 'questions of eth- ics', and 'questions of ultimate meaning'. The
question of humanity's place in the cosmos and in nature is
pre-eminently a philosophical and religious one, and physics seems to
have little to contribute to answering it. Although physics claims to
have made very fundamental discoveries about the cosmos and nature, its
concern is with the coherence and order of material phenomena rather
than with questions of mean- ing. Now and then thinkers such as Stephen
Hawking or Fritjof Capra emerge, who appear to claim that a total
world-view can be derived from physics. Generally, however, such authors
do not actually make any great effort to make good on their claim to
completeness: their answers to questions of meaning often pale in
compari- 2 son with their answers to conventional questions in physics.
Moreover, to the extent that they do attempt to answer questions of
meaning, it is easy to show that they 3 draw on assumptions from outside
physics.