Isaac Newton: Adventurer in ThoughtIn this elegant, absorbing biography of Isaac Newton (1642-1727), Rupert Hall surveys the vast field of modern scholarship in order to interpret Newton's mathematical and experimental approach to nature. Mathematics was always the deepest, most innovative and productive of Newton's interests. However, he was also a historian, theologian, chemist, civil servant and natural philosopher. These diverse studies were unified in his single design as a Christian to explore every facet of God's creation. The exploration during the past forty years of Newton's huge manuscript legacy, has greatly altered previous stories of Newton's life, throwing new light on his personality and intellect. Hall's discussion of this research, first published in 1992, shows that Newton cannot simply be explained as a Platonist, or mystic. He remains a complex and enigmatic genius with an immensely imaginative and commonsensical mind. |
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Índice
| xiii | |
| xvi | |
| 1 | |
| 30 | |
| 65 | |
| 90 | |
5 Publication and Polemic 16721678 | 116 |
6 Life in Cambridge 16751685 | 143 |
10 Fluxions and Fury 16771712 | 249 |
11 Opticks or a Treatise of Light 16871704 | 279 |
12 Life in London 16961718 | 294 |
13 A Man of Authority and Learning 16921727 | 322 |
14 Later Books 17061726 | 349 |
15 Kensington 17251727 | 368 |
Appendices | 381 |
Notes | 399 |
7 The Chemical Philosopher 16691695 | 179 |
8 The Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy 16791687 | 202 |
9 Private and Public Life 16851696 | 225 |
Bibliography | 453 |
Index | 459 |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
aether alchemical algebra analysis astronomer atoms Barrow Bernoulli body Boyle calculus Cambridge chemical Christiaan Huygens College Collins Collins’s colours comets Conduitt copy Correspondence Cotes curves David Gregory Descartes Descartes’s draft early edition Edmond Halley evidence experimental experiments Fatio find first Flamsteed Flamsteed’s fluxions force geometrical gravity Halley Halley’s Henry Oldenburg Hooke Hooke's Hooke’s Humphrey Huygens hypothesis Ibid ideas infinite influence Isaac Barrow Isaac Newton Johann Bernoulli John John Wallis later Latin Leibniz letter light Lincolnshire London manuscript material Mathematical Papers mathematicians matter mechanical philosophy mechanics mercury metals method motion Never at Rest Newton wrote Newtonian notebook notes Oldenburg optical lectures orbit particles perhaps Philosophical physical planets Principia principle printed prism problem Proposition published quadrature Queries rays recorded reflected refraction Robert Boyle Robert Hooke Roger Cotes Royal Society Scholium scientific seems theory tion tract treatise Trinity universe Wallis Westfall writing

