![[Newton]](biognewton.jpg)
Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1727)
Sir Isaac Newton was born to a farming family in Woolsthotpe,
Lincolnshire on 25 December 1642 (4 January 1643 in the Gregorian calendar).
He received a bachelor's degree at Trinity College Cambridge in 1665,
became a Fellow of Trinity College in 1667 and Lucasian Professor
of Mathematics at Cambridge in 1669.
During his period at Cambridge he became responsible for some
of the most enduring results in mathematics and physics. He co-discovered
the Calculus, with Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz.
As a physicist he discovered the composition of white light. He explored the
mechanics of planetary motion and proposed the three fundamental laws
of mechanics, the law of gravitation and the inverse square law.
In 1687 he published the "Principia", generally regarded the most significant
scientific book ever written, and embodying his discoveries.
In 1672 Newton was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society.
Newton became Warden of the Royal Mint in 1696 and Masterof the Mint in 1699.
In 1703 Newton was elected President of the Royal Society and re-elected as such
every year until his death.
He published "Opticks", which discussed Newton's rings and diffractions as
well as his theories on the composition of light. in 1704. He was
knighted by Queen Anne in 1705. In his
later life he did not engage in scientific research.
He took a direct interest in the operations of the Mint and became wealthy.
Newton's life was clouded in controversy with a number of people,
such as Hooke, over the origin of the inverse square law and who had claimed he stole
ideas in optics from him, and with Leibniz over the origins of the calculus.
Newton died in London in 1727.
Written by Peter Taylor, January 2001.
A number of historical references were used in composing this short biography.
They included
- Men of Mathematics, ET Bell, Simon and Schuster, New York, 1937, 1965.
- An Introduction to the History of Mathematics, Howard Eves, 4th ed,,
Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New York, 1976.
Newton is the subject of the Australian Mathematics
Trust T Shirt in 2003.
![[Newton]](tsnewton.jpg)
This is available for sale through
AMT Publishing.
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