Again, thank you to FEers for taking an isolated conclusion and applying it in a blanket and overgeneralised way.
Yes, Newton was wrong. But Newton being wrong doesn't mean the truth has to be the complete opposite. Newton's laws were a refinement on the work of Galileo. Similarly, Newton's work was refined by General relativity, which will no doubt be refined again whenever quantum gravity is more accurately formulated.
The point is, these are steps of refinement, each progressively more accurate than the last. Newton's laws of motion are still used today because they are accurate enough for most purposes. Newton being "wrong" is true only in the sense that his laws are not infinitely accurate.
Similarly, in mathematics, you can argue that Pi = 3.14159 is wrong because it's not infinitely accurate. However, unless you're measuring photons orbiting around the edge of the universe, you won't need a value of pi more accurate than that. Plus, it would be ludicrous to suggest that, because this value is not infinitely accurate, then Pi must be equal to something around five hundred thousand.