Isaac Newton: The Fluxional Method
Isaac Newton: The Fluxional Method
Newton received his bachelor's degree in 1665. After an intermission of nearly two years to avoid the plague,
Newton returned to Trinity, which elected him to a fellowship in 1667. He received his master's degree in
1668. Newton ignored much of the established curriculum of the university to pursue his own interests:
mathematics and natural philosophy. Proceeding entirely on his own, he investigated the latest
developments in mathematics and the new natural philosophy that treated nature as a complicated machine.
Almost immediately, he made fundamental discoveries that were instrumental in his career in science.
The Principia
In August 1684 Newton's solitude was interrupted by a visit from Edmund Halley, the British astronomer
and mathematician, who discussed with Newton the problem of orbital motion. Newton had also pursued
the science of mechanics as an undergraduate, and at that time he had already entertained basic notions
about universal gravitation. As a result of Halley's visit, Newton returned to these studies.
During the following two and a half years, Newton established the modern science of dynamics by
formulating his three laws of motion. Newton applied these laws to Kepler's laws of orbital motion
formulated by the German astronomer Johannes Kepler and derived the law of universal gravitation. Newton
is probably best known for discovering universal gravitation, which explains that all bodies in space and on
earth are affected by the force called gravity. He published this theory in his book Philosophiae Naturalis
Principia Mathematica in 1687. This book marked a turning point in the history of science; it also ensured
that its author could never regain his privacy.
The Principia's appearance also involved Newton in an unpleasant episode with the English philosopher and
physicist Robert Hooke. In 1687 Hooke claimed that Newton had stolen from him a central idea of the book:
that bodies attract each other with a force that varies inversely as the square of their distance. However,
most historians do not accept Hooke's charge of plagiarism.
In the same year, 1687, Newton helped lead Cambridge's resistance to the efforts of King James II to make
the university a Catholic institution. After the English Revolution in 1688, which drove James from England,
the university elected Newton one of its representatives in a special convening of the country's parliament.
The following four years were filled with intense activity for Newton, as, buoyed by the triumph of the
Principia, he tried to put all his earlier achievements into a final written form. In the summer of 1693 Newton
showed symptoms of a severe emotional disorder. Although he regained his health, his creative period had
come to an end.
Newton's connections with the leaders of the new regime in England led to his appointment as warden, and
later master, of the Royal Mint in London, where he lived after 1696. In 1703 the Royal Society elected him
president, an office he held for the rest of his life. As president, he ordered the immediate publication of the
astronomical observations of the first Astronomer Royal of England, John Flamsteed. Newton needed these
observations to perfect his lunar theory. This matter led to a difficult conflict with Flamsteed.
Newton also engaged in a violent dispute with Leibniz over priority in the invention of calculus. Newton
used his position as president of the Royal Society to have a committee of that body investigate the question,
and he secretly wrote the committee's report, which charged Leibniz with deliberate plagiarism. Newton
also compiled the book of evidence that the society published. The effects of the quarrel lingered nearly
until his death in 1727.
In addition to science, Newton also showed an interest in alchemy, mysticism, and theology. Many pages
of his notes and writings particularly from the later years of his career are devoted to these topics. However,
historians have found little connection between these interests and Newton's scientific work.