Isaac Newton and the Scientific Revolution

Voorkant
Oxford University Press, 1996 - 155 pagina's
In 1665, when an epidemic of the plague forced Cambridge University to close, Isaac Newton, then a young, undistinguished scholar, returned to his childhood home in rural England. Away from his colleagues and professors, Newton embarked on one of the greatest intellectual odysseys in the history of science: he began to formulate the law of universal gravitation, developed the calculus, and made revolutionary discoveries about the nature of light. After his return to Cambridge, Newton's genius was quickly recognized and his reputation forever established. This biography also allows us to see the personal side of Newton, whose life away from science was equally fascinating. Quarrelsome, quirky, and not above using his position to silence critics and further his own career, he was an authentic genius with all too human faults.

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Over de auteur (1996)

Gale E. Christianson is Distinguished Professor, College of Arts and Sciences and Professor of History at Indiana State University. He has twice been nominated for the Pulitzer Prize, for In the Presence of the Creator: Isaac Newton and His Times and Fox at the Wood's Edge: A Biography of Loren Eiseley.

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