BIOGRAPHY
: SIR ISAAC NEWTON
English
physicist and mathematician Sir Isaac Newton, most famous for his law of
gravitation, was instrumental in the scientific revolution of the 17th century.
Newton, Sir Isaac (1642-1727), English natural
philosopher, generally regarded as the most original and influential theorist
in the history of science. In addition to his invention of the infinitesimal
calculus and a new theory of light and color, Newton transformed the structure
of physical science with his three laws of motion and the law of universal
gravitation. As the keystone of the scientific revolution of the 17th century,
Newton's work combined the contributions of Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo,
Descartes, and others into a new and powerful synthesis. Three centuries later
the resulting structure - classical mechanics - continues to be a useful but no
less elegant monument to his genius.
Life & Character - Isaac Newton was
born prematurely on Christmas day 1642 (4 January 1643, New Style) in
Woolsthorpe, a hamlet near Grantham in Lincolnshire. The posthumous son of an
illiterate yeoman (also named Isaac), the fatherless infant was small enough at
birth to fit 'into a quartpot.' When he was barely three years old Newton's
mother, Hanna (Ayscough), placed her first born with his grandmother in order
to remarry and raise a second family with Barnabas Smith, a wealthy rector from
nearby North Witham. Much has been made of Newton's posthumous birth, his
prolonged separation from his mother, and his unrivaled hatred of his
stepfather. Until Hanna returned to Woolsthorpe in 1653 after the death of her
second husband, Newton was denied his mother's attention, a possible clue to
his complex character. Newton's childhood was anything but happy, and
throughout his life he verged on emotional collapse, occasionally falling into
violent and vindictive attacks against friend and foe alike.
With his mother's
return to Woolsthorpe in 1653, Newton was taken from school to fulfill his
birthright as a farmer. Happily, he failed in this calling, and returned to
King's School at Grantham to prepare for entrance to Trinity College,
Cambridge. Numerous anecdotes survive from this period about Newton's
absent-mindedness as a fledging farmer and his lackluster performance as a
student. But the turning point in Newton's life came in June 1661 when he left
Woolsthorpe for Cambridge University. Here Newton entered a new world, one he
could eventually call his own.
Although Cambridge
was an outstanding center of learning, the spirit of the scientific revolution
had yet to penetrate its ancient and somewhat ossified curriculum. Little is
known of Newton's formal studies as an undergraduate, but he likely received
large doses of Aristotle as well as other classical authors. And by all
appearances his academic performance was undistinguished. In 1664 Isaac Barrow,
Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at Cambridge, examined Newton's understanding
of Euclid and found it sorely lacking. We now know that during his
undergraduate years Newton was deeply engrossed in private study, that he
privately mastered the works of René Descartes, Pierre Gassendi, Thomas Hobbes,
and other major figures of the scientific revolution. A series of extant
notebooks shows that by 1664 Newton had begun to master Descartes' Géométrie
and other forms of mathematics far in advance of Euclid's Elements.
Barrow, himself a gifted mathematician, had yet to appreciate Newton's genius.
In 1665 Newton took
his bachelor's degree at Cambridge without honors or distinction. Since the
university was closed for the next two years because of plague, Newton returned
to Woolsthorpe in midyear. There, in the following 18 months, he made a series
of original contributions to science. As he later recalled, 'All this was in
the two plague years of 1665 and 1666, for in those days I was in my prime of
age for invention, and minded mathematics and philosophy more than at any time
since.' In mathematics Newton conceived his 'method of fluxions' (infinitesimal
calculus), laid the foundations for his theory of light and color, and achieved
significant insight into the problem of planetary motion, insights that
eventually led to the publication of his Principia (1687).
In April 1667, Newton
returned to Cambridge and, against stiff odds, was elected a minor fellow at
Trinity. Success followed good fortune. In the next year he became a senior
fellow upon taking his master of arts degree, and in 1669, before he had
reached his 27th birthday, he succeeded Isaac Barrow as Lucasian Professor of
Mathematics. The duties of this appointment offered Newton the opportunity to
organize the results of his earlier optical researches, and in 1672, shortly
after his election to the Royal Society, he communicated his first public
paper, a brilliant but no less controversial study on the nature of color.
In the first of a
series of bitter disputes, Newton locked horns with the society's celebrated
curator of experiments, the bright but brittle Robert Hooke. The ensuing
controversy, which continued until 1678, established a pattern in Newton's
behavior. After an initial skirmish, he quietly retreated. Nonetheless, in 1675
Newton ventured another yet another paper, which again drew lightning, this
time charged with claims that he had plagiarized from Hooke. The charges were
entirely ungrounded. Twice burned, Newton withdrew.
In 1678, Newton suffered
a serious emotional breakdown, and in the following year his mother died.
Newton's response was to cut off contact with others and engross himself in
alchemical research. These studies, once an embarrassment to Newton scholars,
were not misguided musings but rigorous investigations into the hidden forces
of nature. Newton's alchemical studies opened theoretical avenues not found in
the mechanical philosophy, the world view that sustained his early work. While
the mechanical philosophy reduced all phenomena to the impact of matter in
motion, the alchemical tradition upheld the possibility of attraction and
repulsion at the particulate level. Newton's later insights in celestial
mechanics can be traced in part to his alchemical interests. By combining action-at-a-distance
and mathematics, Newton transformed the mechanical philosophy by adding a
mysterious but no less measurable quantity, gravitational force.
In 1666, as tradition
has it, Newton observed the fall of an apple in his garden at Woolsthorpe, later
recalling, 'In the same year I began to think of gravity extending to the orb
of the Moon.' Newton's memory was not accurate. In fact, all evidence suggests
that the concept of universal gravitation did not spring full-blown from
Newton's head in 1666 but was nearly 20 years in gestation. Ironically, Robert
Hooke helped give it life. In November 1679, Hooke initiated an exchange of
letters that bore on the question of planetary motion. Although Newton hastily
broke off the correspondence, Hooke's letters provided a conceptual link
between central attraction and a force falling off with the square of distance.
Sometime in early 1680, Newton appears to have quietly drawn his own
conclusions.
Meanwhile, in the
coffeehouses of London, Hooke, Edmund Halley, and Christopher Wren struggled
unsuccessfully with the problem of planetary motion. Finally, in August 1684,
Halley paid a legendary visit to Newton in Cambridge, hoping for an answer to
his riddle: What type of curve does a planet describe in its orbit around
the sun, assuming an inverse square law of attraction? When Halley posed the
question, Newton's ready response was 'an ellipse.' When asked how he knew it
was an ellipse Newton replied that he had already calculated it. Although
Newton had privately answered one of the riddles of the universe--and he alone
possessed the mathematical ability to do so--he had characteristically
misplaced the calculation. After further discussion he promised to send Halley
a fresh calculation forthwith. In partial fulfillment of his promise Newton
produced his De Motu of 1684. From that seed, after nearly two years of
intense labor, the Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica
appeared. Arguably, it is the most important book published in the history of
science. But if the Principia was Newton's brainchild, Hooke and Halley
were nothing less than midwives.
Although the Principia
was well received, its future was cast in doubt before it appeared. Here again
Hooke was center stage, this time claiming (not without justification) that his
letters of 1679-1680 earned him a role in Newton's discovery. But to no effect.
Newton was so furious with Hooke that he threatened to suppress Book III of the
Principia altogether, finally denouncing science as 'an impertinently
litigious lady.' Newton calmed down and finally consented to publication. But
instead of acknowledging Hooke's contribution Newton systematically deleted
every possible mention of Hooke's name. Newton's hatred for Hooke was
consumptive. Indeed, Newton later withheld publication of his Opticks
(1704) and virtually withdrew from the Royal Society until Hooke's death in
1703.
After publishing the Principia,
Newton became more involved in public affairs. In 1689 he was elected to
represent Cambridge in Parliament, and during his stay in London he became
acquainted with John Locke, the famous philosopher, and Nicolas Fatio de
Duillier, a brilliant young mathematician who became an intimate friend. In
1693, however, Newton suffered a severe nervous disorder, not unlike his
breakdown of 1677-1678. The cause is open to interpretation: overwork; the
stress of controversy; the unexplained loss of friendship with Fatio; or
perhaps chronic mercury poisoning, the result of nearly three decades of
alchemical research. Each factor may have played a role. We only know Locke and
Samuel Pepys received strange and seemingly deranged letters that prompted
concern for Newton's 'discomposure in head, or mind, or both.' Whatever the
cause, shortly after his recovery Newton sought a new position in London. In
1696, with the help of Charles Montague, a fellow of Trinity and later earl of
Halifax, Newton was appointed Warden and then Master of the Mint. His new
position proved 'most proper,' and he left Cambridge for London without regret.
During his London
years Newton enjoyed power and worldly success. His position at the Mint
assured a comfortable social and economic status, and he was an active and able
administrator. After the death of Hooke in 1703, Newton was elected president
of the Royal Society and was annually reelected until his death. In 1704 he
published his second major work, the Opticks, based largely on work
completed decades before. He was knighted in 1705.
Although his creative
years had passed, Newton continued to exercise a profound influence on the
development of science. In effect, the Royal Society was Newton's instrument,
and he played it to his personal advantage. His tenure as president has been
described as tyrannical and autocratic, and his control over the lives and
careers of younger disciples was all but absolute. Newton could not abide
contradiction or controversy - his quarrels with Hooke provide singular
examples. But in later disputes, as president of the Royal Society, Newton
marshaled all the forces at his command. For example, he published Flamsteed's
astronomical observations - the labor of a lifetime - without the author's
permission; and in his priority dispute with Leibniz concerning the calculus,
Newton enlisted younger men to fight his war of words, while behind the lines
he secretly directed charge and countercharge. In the end, the actions of the
Society were little more than extensions of Newton's will, and until his death
he dominated the landscape of science without rival. He died in London on March
20, 1727 (March 31, New Style).
Scientific
Achievements
Mathematics - The origin of
Newton's interest in mathematics can be traced to his undergraduate days at
Cambridge. Here Newton became acquainted with a number of contemporary works,
including an edition of Descartes Géométrie, John Wallis' Arithmetica
infinitorum, and other works by prominent mathematicians. But between 1664
and his return to Cambridge after the plague, Newton made fundamental
contributions to analytic geometry, algebra, and calculus. Specifically, he
discovered the binomial theorem, new methods for expansion of infinite series,
and his 'direct and inverse method of fluxions.' As the term implies, fluxional
calculus is a method for treating changing or flowing quantities. Hence, a
'fluxion' represents the rate of change of a 'fluent'--a continuously changing
or flowing quantity, such as distance, area, or length. In essence, fluxions
were the first words in a new language of physics.
Newton's creative
years in mathematics extended from 1664 to roughly the spring of 1696. Although
his predecessors had anticipated various elements of the calculus, Newton
generalized and integrated these insights while developing new and more
rigorous methods. The essential elements of his thought were presented in three
tracts, the first appearing in a privately circulated treatise, De analysi
(On Analysis),which went unpublished until 1711. In 1671, Newton
developed a more complete account of his method of infinitesimals, which
appeared nine years after his death as Methodus fluxionum et serierum
infinitarum (The Method of Fluxions and Infinite Series, 1736). In
addition to these works, Newton wrote four smaller tracts, two of which were
appended to his Opticks of 1704.
Newton and Leibniz. Next to its
brilliance, the most characteristic feature of Newton's mathematical career was
delayed publication. Newton's priority dispute with Leibniz is a celebrated but
unhappy example. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Newton's most capable adversary,
began publishing papers on calculus in 1684, almost 20 years after Newton's
discoveries commenced. The result of this temporal discrepancy was a bitter
dispute that raged for nearly two decades. The ordeal began with rumors that
Leibniz had borrowed ideas from Newton and rushed them into print. It ended
with charges of dishonesty and outright plagiarism. The Newton-Leibniz priority
dispute--which eventually extended into philosophical areas concerning the
nature of God and the universe--ultimately turned on the ambiguity of priority.
It is now generally agreed that Newton and Leibniz each developed the calculus
independently, and hence they are considered co-discoverers. But while Newton
was the first to conceive and develop his method of fluxions, Leibniz was the
first to publish his independent results.
Optics. Newton's optical
research, like his mathematical investigations, began during his undergraduate
years at Cambridge. But unlike his mathematical work, Newton's studies in
optics quickly became public. Shortly after his election to the Royal Society
in 1671, Newton published his first paper in the Philosophical Transactions
of the Royal Society. This paper, and others that followed, drew on his
undergraduate researches as well as his Lucasian lectures at Cambridge.
In 1665-1666, Newton
performed a number of experiments on the composition of light. Guided initially
by the writings of Kepler and Descartes, Newton's main discovery was that
visible (white) light is heterogeneous--that is, white light is composed of
colors that can be considered primary. Through a brilliant series of
experiments, Newton demonstrated that prisms separate rather than modify white
light. Contrary to the theories of Aristotle and other ancients, Newton held
that white light is secondary and heterogeneous, while the separate colors are
primary and homogeneous. Of perhaps equal importance, Newton also demonstrated
that the colors of the spectrum, once thought to be qualities, correspond to an
observed and quantifiable 'degree of Refrangibility.'
The Crucial Experiment. Newton's most famous experiment, the experimentum crucis,
demonstrated his theory of the composition of light. Briefly, in a dark room
Newton allowed a narrow beam of sunlight to pass from a small hole in a window
shutter through a prism, thus breaking the white light into an oblong spectrum
on a board. Then, through a small aperture in the board, Newton selected a
given color (for example, red) to pass through yet another aperture to a second
prism, through which it was refracted onto a second board. What began as
ordinary white light was thus dispersed through two prisms.
Newton's 'crucial
experiment' demonstrated that a selected color leaving the first prism could
not be separated further by the second prism. The selected beam remained the
same color, and its angle of refraction was constant throughout. Newton
concluded that white light is a 'Heterogeneous mixture of differently
refrangible Rays' and that colors of the spectrum cannot themselves be
individually modified, but are 'Original and connate properties.'
Newton probably
conducted a number of his prism experiments at Cambridge before the plague
forced him to return to Woolsthorpe. His Lucasian lectures, later published in
part as Optical Lectures (1728), supplement other researches published
in the Society's Transactions dating from February 1672.
The Opticks. The Opticks of
1704, which first appeared in English, is Newton's most comprehensive and
readily accessible work on light and color. In Newton's words, the purpose of
the Opticks was 'not to explain the Properties of Light by Hypotheses,
but to propose and prove them by Reason and Experiments.' Divided into three
books, the Opticks moves from definitions, axioms, propositions, and
theorems to proof by experiment. A subtle blend of mathematical reasoning and
careful observation, the Opticks became the model for experimental
physics in the 18th century.
The Corpuscular Theory. But the Opticks contained more than experimental results.
During the 17th century it was widely held that light, like sound, consisted of
a wave or undulatory motion, and Newton's major critics in the field of
optics--Robert Hooke and Christiaan Huygens--were articulate spokesmen for this
theory. But Newton disagreed. Although his views evolved over time, Newton's
theory of light was essentially corpuscular, or particulate. In effect, since
light (unlike sound) travels in straight lines and casts a sharp shadow, Newton
suggested that light was composed of discrete particles moving in straight
lines in the manner of inertial bodies. Further, since experiment had shown
that the properties of the separate colors of light were constant and
unchanging, so too, Newton reasoned, was the stuff of light itself-- particles.
At various points in
his career Newton in effect combined the particle and wave theories of light.
In his earliest dispute with Hooke and again in his Opticks of 1717,
Newton considered the possibility of an ethereal substance--an all-pervasive
elastic material more subtle than air--that would provide a medium for the
propagation of waves or vibrations. From the outset Newton rejected the basic
wave models of Hooke and Huygens, perhaps because they overlooked the subtlety
of periodicity.
The question of
periodicity arose with the phenomenon known as 'Newton's rings.' In book II of
the Opticks, Newton describes a series of experiments concerning the
colors of thin films. His most remarkable observation was that light passing
through a convex lens pressed against a flat glass plate produces concentric
colored rings (Newton's rings) with alternating dark rings. Newton attempted to
explain this phenomenon by employing the particle theory in conjunction with
his hypothesis of 'fits of easy transmission [refraction] and reflection.'
After making careful measurements, Newton found that the thickness of the film
of air between the lens (of a given curvature) and the glass corresponded to
the spacing of the rings. If dark rings occurred at thicknesses of 0, 2, 4,
6... , then the colored rings corresponded to an odd number progression, 1, 3,
5, 7, .... Although Newton did not speculate on the cause of this periodicity,
his initial association of 'Newton's rings' with vibrations in a medium
suggests his willingness to modify but not abandon the particle theory.
The Opticks
was Newton's most widely read work. Following the first edition, Latin versions
appeared in 1706 and 1719, and second and third English editions in 1717 and
1721. Perhaps the most provocative part of the Opticks is the section
known as the 'Queries,' which Newton placed at the end of the book. Here he
posed questions and ventured opinions on the nature of light, matter, and the
forces of nature.
Mechanics. Newton's research
in dynamics falls into three major periods: the plague years 1664-1666, the
investigations of 1679-1680, following Hooke's correspondence, and the period
1684-1687, following Halley's visit to Cambridge. The gradual evolution of
Newton's thought over these two decades illustrates the complexity of his
achievement as well as the prolonged character of scientific 'discovery.'
While the myth of
Newton and the apple maybe true, the traditional account of Newton and gravity
is not. To be sure, Newton's early thoughts on gravity began in Woolsthorpe,
but at the time of his famous 'moon test' Newton had yet to arrive at the
concept of gravitational attraction. Early manuscripts suggest that in the
mid-1660's, Newton did not think in terms of the moon's central attraction
toward the earth but rather of the moon's centrifugal tendency to recede. Under
the influence of the mechanical philosophy, Newton had yet to consider the possibility
of action- at-a-distance; nor was he aware of Kepler's first two planetary
hypotheses. For historical, philosophical, and mathematical reasons, Newton
assumed the moon's centrifugal 'endeavour' to be equal and opposite to some
unknown mechanical constraint. For the same reasons, he also assumed a circular
orbit and an inverse square relation. The latter was derived from Kepler's
third hypothesis (the square of a planet's orbital period is proportional to
the cube of its mean distance from the sun), the formula for centrifugal force
(the centrifugal force on a revolving body is proportional to the square of its
velocity and inversely proportional to the radius of its orbit), and the
assumption of circular orbits.
The next step was to
test the inverse square relation against empirical data. To do this Newton, in
effect, compared the restraint on the moon's 'endeavour' to recede with the
observed rate of acceleration of falling objects on earth. The problem was to
obtain accurate data. Assuming Galileo's estimate that the moon is 60 earth
radii from the earth, the restraint on the moon should have been 1/3600 (1/602)
of the gravitational acceleration on earth. But Newton's estimate of the size
of the earth was too low, and his calculation showed the effect on the moon to
be about 1/4000 of that on earth. As Newton later described it, the moon test
answered 'pretty nearly.' But the figures for the moon were not exact, and
Newton abandoned the problem.
In late 1679 and
early 1680 an exchange of letters with Hooke renewed Newton's interest. In
November 1679, nearly 15 years after the moon test, Hooke wrote Newton concerning
a hypothesis presented in his Attempt to Prove the Motion of the Earth
(1674). Here Hooke proposed that planetary orbits result from a tangential
motion and 'an attractive motion towards the centrall body.' In later letters
Hooke further specified a central attracting force that fell off with the
square of distance. As a result of this exchange Newton rejected his earlier
notion of centrifugal tendencies in favor of central attraction. Hooke's
letters provided crucial insight. But in retrospect, if Hooke's intuitive power
seems unparalleled, it never approached Newton's mathematical power in
principle or in practice.
When Halley visited
Cambridge in 1684, Newton had already demonstrated the relation between an
inverse square attraction and elliptical orbits. To Halley's 'joy and
amazement,' Newton apparently succeeded where he and others failed. With this,
Halley's role shifted, and he proceeded to guide Newton toward publication.
Halley personally financed the Principia and saw it through the press to
publication in July 1687.
The Principia. Newton's
masterpiece is divided into three books. Book I of the Principia begins
with eight definitions and three axioms, the latter now known as Newton's laws
of motion. No discussion of Newton would be complete without them: (1) Every
body continues in its state of rest, or uniform motion in a straight line,
unless it is compelled to change that state by forces impressed on it
(inertia). (2) The change in motion is proportional to the motive force
impressed and is made in the direction of the straight line in which that force
is impressed (F = ma). (3) To every action there is always an opposed and equal
reaction. Following these axioms, Newton proceeds step by step with
propositions, theorems, and problems.
In Book II of the Principia,
Newton treats the Motion of bodies through resisting mediums as well as the
motion of fluids themselves. Since Book II was not part of Newton's initial
outline, it has traditionally seemed somewhat out of place. Nonetheless, it is
noteworthy that near the end of Book II (Section IX) Newton demonstrates that
the vortices invoked by Descartes to explain planetary motion could not be
self-sustaining; nor was the vortex theory consistent with Kepler's three
planetary rules. The purpose of Book II then becomes clear. After discrediting
Descartes' system, Newton concludes: 'How these motions are performed in free
space without vortices, may be understood by the first book; and I shall now
more fully treat of it in the following book.'
In Book III,
subtitled the System of the World, Newton extended his three laws of
motion to the frame of the world, finally demonstrating 'that there is a power
of gravity tending to all bodies, proportional to the several quantities of
matter which they contain.' Newton's law of universal gravitation states that F
= G Mm/R2; that is, that all matter is mutually attracted with a
force (F) proportional to the product of their masses (Mm) and inversely
proportional to the square of distance (R2) between them. G is a constant whose
value depends on the units used for mass and distance. To demonstrate the power
of his theory, Newton used gravitational attraction to explain the motion of
the planets and their moons, the precession of equinoxes, the action of the tides,
and the motion of comets. In sum, Newton's universe united heaven and earth
with a single set of laws. It became the physical and intellectual foundation
of the modern world view.
Perhaps the most
powerful and influential scientific treatise ever published, the Principia
appeared in two further editions during Newton's lifetime, in 1713 and 1726.
Other Researches. Throughout his
career Newton conducted research in theology and history with the same passion
that he pursued alchemy and science. Although some historians have neglected
Newton's nonscientific writings, there is little doubt of his devotion to these
subjects, as his manuscripts amply attest. Newton's writings on theological and
biblical subjects alone amount to about 1.3 million words, the equivalent of 20
of today's standard length books. Although these writings say little about
Newtonian science, they tell us a good deal about Isaac Newton.
Newton's final
gesture before death was to refuse the sacrament, a decision of some
consequence in the 18th century. Although Newton was dutifully raised in the
Protestant tradition his mature views on theology were neither Protestant,
traditional, nor orthodox. In the privacy of his thoughts and writings, Newton
rejected a host of doctrines he considered mystical, irrational, or
superstitious. In a word, he was a Unitarian.
Newton's research
outside of science--in theology, prophecy, and history--was a quest for
coherence and unity. His passion was to unite knowledge and belief, to
reconcile the Book of Nature with the Book of Scripture. But for all the
elegance of his thought and the boldness of his quest, the riddle of Isaac
Newton remained. In the end, Newton is as much an enigma to us as he was, no
doubt, to himself.
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