The word "gravity" traveled one of the most remarkable semantic journeys in the history of science: from a description of moral character to the name of a fundamental force of nature. It entered English around 1509 from Latin "gravitās" (weight, heaviness, seriousness, dignity), from "gravis" (heavy, weighty, serious), from Proto-Indo-European *gʷreh₂- (heavy).
In Latin, "gravis" carried both physical and metaphorical weight. A stone was "gravis" (physically heavy), but so was a senator's demeanor (serious, dignified). "Gravitās" was one of the cardinal Roman virtues — the quality of being substantial, serious, and worthy of respect. A Roman who displayed "gravitās" was someone of weight and authority, not frivolous or lightweight. This moral sense was the first meaning English adopted.
Isaac Newton transformed the word when he used it to describe the universal force of attraction between masses. In his "Principia Mathematica" (1687), Newton systematized what he called "gravitas" — the tendency of objects to fall toward the earth and of celestial bodies to orbit one another. By borrowing a word that already meant weightiness and seriousness, Newton gave the physical force a name that resonated with existing intuitions about heaviness.
The PIE root *gʷreh₂- (heavy) generated an extensive family. Latin "gravis" gave English "grave" (both the adjective meaning serious and, through a different path, the noun for a burial place — a heavy, solemn location). "Aggravate" means literally to make heavier (more serious). "Grief" and "grieve" come through French from the same Latin root — grief is a heavy feeling. Sanskrit
The connection between physical heaviness and moral seriousness is deeply embedded in Indo-European languages. English speaks of "weighty matters," "heavy hearts," and "light-hearted" attitudes. German uses "schwer" for both physically heavy and emotionally difficult. This metaphorical mapping — serious things are heavy, trivial things are light — appears to be one of the most fundamental conceptual metaphors in human thought.
After Newton, the physics meaning of "gravity" gradually became primary. Einstein's general theory of relativity (1915) reinterpreted gravity not as a force but as a curvature of spacetime caused by mass and energy. Despite this radical reconceptualization, the word "gravity" remained — a 16th-century borrowing from Latin still naming a phenomenon at the frontier of modern physics.
The phrase "center of gravity" originated in physics (the point where an object's weight is concentrated) but has been metaphorically extended to mean the core focus or most important aspect of anything. Military strategy uses it extensively — Carl von Clausewitz identified the enemy's "center of gravity" as the key target whose destruction would lead to victory.
"Zero gravity" (or more accurately, "microgravity") became familiar through the space age. Astronauts floating in the International Space Station experience apparent weightlessness not because gravity is absent (it is about 90% as strong at ISS altitude as on Earth's surface) but because they are in continuous free fall around the Earth.
The dual meaning persists in modern English. A news anchor can describe "the gravity of the situation" (seriousness) in one sentence and "the effects of gravity" (physical force) in the next. Both senses — the moral weight of character and the physical weight of matter — flow from a single Latin adjective that meant, simply, heavy.