In April, 1727, the French writer Voltaire viewed with astonishment the preparations for the funeral of Sir Isaac Newton. The late President of the Royal Society lay in state in Westminster Abbey for the week preceding the funeral on April 4th. On that day, his pall was borne in a ceremonious pageant by two dukes, three earls, and the Lord Chancellor. "He was buried," Voltaire wrote, "like a king who had done well by his subjects." Over the three hundred years since the publication of his Principia Mathematica, Newton has come to symbolize the ideal of scientist and mathematician par excellence. Let Newton Be (the title comes from a famous couplet by Alexander Pope) explores the richness of Newton's life, labors, and legacy. What kind of scientist was Newton? What connections are there between the different strands of research he undertook? Why were his contemporaries so in awe of him? How has Newton's work left its mark on our understanding of the world? To address these questions, each chapter addresses a different aspect of Newton's life and work, making use of much new evidence about Newton uncovered in the last two decades. They consider Newton's work in mathematics and optics, his secret experiments with alchemy, his religious views (which were unconventional), the negative reaction to his work (as seen, for instance, in the poetry of William Blake), and his legacy for modern science. We learn that, were it not for Edmund Halley, Newton probably wouldn't have written his Principia at all; and that much of his work on planetary motion derived from his correspondence with Robert Hooke, a man Newton came to hate because he demanded credit for his contributions, which Newton refused to give. Richly illustrated, vividly written, and based on the latest scholarship, Let Newton Be is an absorbing introduction to the legacy of Britain's greatest scientist as well as a fascinating study in the history of ideas.
More than any other I have found, this book brought Isaac Newton to life: as a brilliant human being, but still just a human being, with as broad a spectrum of flaws, quirks and vulnerabilities as any of us have. It shows him more as some of his contemporaries may have seen him, before the publication of the Principia began to transform him into a shining demigod of the Enlightenment. It does shine a light on his admittedly obsessive (but still sensible, focused, meticulous and sincere) investigations of theological and alchemical claims that mattered greatly to his generation. Many of these investigations proved to be fruitless, but that does not diminish the man. For these claims lost much of their interest to later generations precisely because the new analytical tools that Newton published in the Principia enabled revolutionary advances in physical knowledge that rapidly pushed alchemy and theology onto the sidelines of intellectual history.Truly a wonderful, balanced and satisfying collection of essays, each written by an expert in a particular perspective on Newton's life and work. I would welcome publication of similar collections of lucid, expert essays on Robert Boyle and Charles Darwin.
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