This list is a bit male heavy so add Ada Lovelace to the list. Perhaps the first programmer and to add another woman, Rosalind Franklin who did so much work on DNA but died before she was properly recognised.
If we're having Turing and Boole, I'd like to add Thomas Bayes, who did so much for statistics.
I'd also nominate a couple of oddballs. One was a local boy, Gideon Mantell, who was the father of paleontology and also William Smith who created the first geological map of the Britain. What these two had in common was that they were shunned by the scientific establishment at the time,
Talking of shunning, I'd finally nominate another local boy (sort of) ,Thomas Paine who managed to get up the noses of everyone but played a part in both the American War of Independence and the French Revolution.
If we had a league table, I'd still place Newton on top. He dominated science for more than 200 years
Florence Nightingale would have to be included - her influence on healthcare was immense (just look at the designs of hospitals in the 20th century) and a great statistician. For a women in that era to have changed so much is outstanding
Sir Christopher Wren deserves a mention.
How the **** you can build something like St Paul’s Cathedral without a computer is utterly beyond me.
In fact how you can build something like St Paul’s Cathedral with a computer is still utterly beyond me.
All the people involved in developing the coronavirus vaccine .
Chain, Fleming & Florey - their pioneering work produced the first pure compound antibiotic.
Countless millions of lives saved, average life expectancy extended, as a result.
[Awaiting @HWT to dismiss this as all in day’s work for scientists).
How the hell is Shakespeare even considered as a genius, he wrote some rather crappy stories with allegations of plagiarism.
Anyone who has rattled the teeth of the woman who sang "Anyone can fall in Love" to the EastEnders theme tune automatically denounces themselves as a genius.
Declan McManus. Songwriter
Lol!
My old boss worked for Chain for a bit. One quote: "I don't have time to read the (scientific) literature - I'm too busy writing it"
OK, here are a few of mine (apologies if others have already mentioned some of them).
Sir James Whyte Black. Nobel prizewinner. He literally invented the first beta blocker (practolol, followed swiftly by the safer analogue, propranolol) and, for an encore, invented the first H1 antihistamine (cimetidine). I met him several times. One of his obituaries described him as 'peppery'. He left Scotland because he was never going to get promotion because he hated writing and publishing his research.