Newton's Apple.

By Peter Aughton

ISBN: 9780297843214

Printed: 2003

Publisher: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. London

Dimensions 20 × 25 × 2 cm
Language

Language: English

Size (cminches): 20 x 25 x 2

Condition: Very good  (See explanation of ratings)

£24.00
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Description

In the original dust jacket. Green cloth binding with gilt title on the spine.

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In the aftermath of the English Civil War, the Restoration overturned England’s medieval outlook and a new way of looking at the world allowed the genius of Isaac Newton (b. 1642) and his contemporaries to flourish. Newton had a long and eventful life apart from his scientific discoveries. He was born at the beginning of the Civil War, his studies were disrupted by the twin disasters of the Great Plague and the Fire of London. A brilliant and enigmatic genius, Newton dabbled in alchemy, wrote over a million words on the Bible, quarrelled with his contemporaries and spent his last years as Master of the Royal Mint as well as President of the Royal Society. This book sets Newton’s life and work against this dramatic intellectual rebirth; among his friends and contemporaries were Samuel Pepys, the colourful diarist, John Evelyn, the eccentric antiquarian, the astronomers Edmund Halley and John Flamsteed, and Christopher Wren, the greatest architect of his age. They were all instrumental in the founding of the Royal Society and their aim was nothing less than to examine the whole field of scientific knowledge.

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