Click For First Page Of This Chapter
The English physicist and mathematician Sir Isaac Newton was one of the leading figures in the scientific
revolution of 17th century England.
In optics, his discovery of the composition of white light integrated the
phenomena of colours into the science of light and laid the foundation for modern physical optics. In
mechanics, his three laws of motion, the basic principles of modern physics, resulted in the formulation
of the law of universal gravitation. In mathematics, he was the original discoverer of the infinitesimal
calculus. Newton's Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica (Mathematical Principles of Natural
Philosophy), 1687, was one of the most important single works in the history of modern science.
Formative influences
Born in Woolsthorpe, Sir Isaac Newton was the only son of a local farmer,
who was also called Isaac Newton. He died three months before Isaac Jnr was born.
The same year, at Arcetri, Galileo Galilei also died; Newton would
eventually pick up his idea of a mathematical science of motion. he would bring Galileo's work
to completion. A small, sickly baby, Isaac Newton wasn't expected to survive his first
few days, much less the 84 years he eventually lived. Deprived of pater before birth, he soon lost mater, for two years later she married for a second time; her second husband, the
well off minister Barnabas Smith, left young Newton with his grandmother and
moved to a neighbouring village to raise a son and two daughters. For nine years,
until the death of Barnabas Smith in 1653, Isaac was effectively separated from
mater. Newton's well known psychotic tendencies have been ascribed to this
traumatic period. The fact Newton hated his stepfather we can be certain. When he examined
the state of his soul in 1662 and compiled a catalog of sins in shorthand, he
remembered "Threatning my father and mother Smith to burne them and the house
over them." The acute sense of insecurity that rendered him obsessively anxious
when his work was published and irrationally violent when he defended it
accompanied Newton throughout his life and can plausibly be traced to his early
years.
After his mother was widowed a second time, she determined that her first-born
son should manage her now considerable property. It quickly became apparent,
however, that this would be a disaster, both for the estate and for Newton. He
could not bring himself to concentrate on rural affairs--set to watch the cattle, he
would curl up under a tree with a book. Fortunately, the mistake was recognized,
and Newton was sent back to the grammar school in Grantham, where he had
already studied, to prepare for the university. As with many of the leading
scientists of the age, he left behind in Grantham anecdotes about his mechanical
ability and his skill in building models of machines, such as clocks and windmills. At
the school he apparently gained a firm command of Latin but probably received no
more than a smattering of arithmetic. By June 1661, he was ready to matriculate
at Trinity College, somewhat older than the other undergraduates
because of his interrupted education.
When Newton arrived in Cambridge in 1661, the movement now known as the
scientific revolution was well underway, and many of the works basic to modern
science had already appeared. Astronomers like Copernicus had advanced
the heliocentric system of the solar system. Galileo proposed the foundations of a
new mechanics built on the fundamentals of inertia. Led by Descartes, philosophers had
begun to formulate a new conception of nature as an intricate, and
inert machine. Yet as far as the universities of Europe, including Cambridge, were
concerned, all this might well have never happened. They continued to be the
strongholds of outmoded Aristotelianism, which rested on a geocentric view of the
universe, which dealt with nature in qualitative rather than quantitative terms.
Like thousands of other new interns, Newton began his higher education by
immersing himself in Aristotle's work. Even though the new philosophy was not in
the curriculum, it was in the air. Some time during his early career,
Isaac Newton stumbled across the works of the French natural philosopher René Descartes
and the other mechanical philosophers, who, in contrast to Aristotle, viewed
physical reality as composed entirely of particles of matter in motion and who held
that all the reason of nature result from mechanical interaction. A new
set of notes, which he entitled "Quaestiones Quaedam Philosophicae" Certain
Philosophical Questions, begun sometime in 1664, usurped the unused pages of
a notebook intended for traditional scholastic exercises; under the title he
entered the slogan "Amicus Plato amicus Aristoteles magis amica veritas" Plato is
my friend, Aristotle is my friend, but my best friend is the truth. Isaac Newton's scientific
career was underway.
The "Quaestiones" reveal that he had discovered the new conception of
nature which provided the pivotal framework of the scientific revolution. Newton carefully
mastered the works of Descartes and had also discovered that the French
philosopher Pierre Gassendi had revived atomism, an alternative mechanical system
to explain nature. The "Quaestiones" also reveal that Newton already was inclined
to find the latter a more attractive philosophy than Cartesian natural philosophy,
which rejected the existence of ultimate indivisible particles. The works of the
17th-century chemist Robert Boyle provided the foundation for Newton's
considerable work in chemistry. Significantly, he had read Henry More, the
Cambridge Platonist, and was thereby introduced to another intellectual world, the
magical Hermetic tradition, which sought to explain natural phenomena in terms of
alchemical and magical concepts. The two traditions of natural philosophy, the
mechanical and the Hermetic, antithetical though they appear, continued to
influence his thought and in their tension supplied the fundamental theme of his
scientific career.
Although he did not record it in the Quaestiones, Newton had also begun his
Continued
Essay Paper 3: Sir Isaac Newton.
Essay Paper 4: Sir Isaac Newton.
Essay Paper 5: Sir Isaac Newton.
Essay Paper 6: Sir Isaac Newton.
Essay Paper 7: Sir Isaac Newton.
|