That sounds like an interesting list; can you provide a link?
Astonishingly, I can, despite the fact that the "official" link is just to study questions.
http://www.wmich.edu/mus-gened/mus170/biography100 Note that I take no responsibility for the vagaries of spelling, capitalization, and so forth on this page.
I wonder about the criteria. Should it include inventors of influential inventions? Even though I'm an engineer I'd lean against it. Contrary to popular belief, few if any inventions come from some solitary genius toiling away in his lab, conceiving things no one else would ever have thought of. (The patent system is based on this myth, one of the reasons it's so thoroughly broken.)
I don't think "no one else would have done it" should be the point, so I'm fine with inventors' making the list. (Though few did.) I think the fact that they
did do it is sufficient.
The real basis of invention is the underlying science, so Newton certainly deserves his spot. Applications of a new scientific principle usually appear very quickly, often by several people at the same time. The classic example is the telephone, invented nearly simultaneously by Bell and Grey.
Sure, but let's then discuss calculus, shall we?
So I wonder about Gutenberg. The moveable type printing press was certainly the most influential invention of the last milennia, but if Gutenberg hadn't invented it don't you think someone else would have?
Sure. But they didn't. If someone else had, someone else would have that spot. (Millennium. "Millennia" is plural.) Leaving aside that there are some people on the list that I don't consider all that influential (Caruso? Really?) and that I quibble with some of their placement, there are very few people who I'd say could not have had what they did done by someone else, and most of those are artists. There is only one Mozart, and while some of the changes in music were inevitable, they wouldn't all have come from a single person.
OTOH, Shakespeare probably deserves his spot on the list. Had he never existed, no number of monkeys would ever have written the same set of plays.
Sure. But we never would have heard of him had the Puritans succeeded in closing the playhouses, which they didn't, because Elizabeth I stopped them. Ergo, she is more influential than he is. It seems I'm wrong and Drake isn't even on the list, but she created an England with room for a Drake and a Shakespeare. The first English colonies in the New World were founded during her reign. She's too low on the list.