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Chapter V - The rise of the Newtonian school

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 September 2010

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Summary

In the last chapter I enumerated very briefly the more important discoveries of Newton, and pointed out the four subjects to which he paid special attention. I have now to describe how those discoveries affected the study of mathematics in the university, and led to the rise of the Newtonian school.

The mathematical school in the university prior to Newton's time contained several distinguished men, but in point of numbers it was not large. We need not therefore be surprised to find that it was Newton's theory of the universe and not his mathematics that excited most attention in the university; and it was because mathematics supplied the key to that theory that it began to be studied so eagerly. Hence the rise of the Newtonian school dates from the publication of the Principia.

In considering the history of this school, it must be remembered that at Cambridge until recently professors only rarely put themselves into contact with or adapted their lectures for the bulk of the students in their own department. Accordingly if we desire to find to whom the spread of a general study of the Newtonian philosophy was immediately due, we must look not to Newton's lectures or writings, but among those proctors, moderators, or college tutors, who had accepted his doctrines. The form in which the Principia was cast, its extreme conciseness, the absence of all illustrations, and the immense interval between the abilities of Newton and those of his contemporaries combined to delay the acceptance of the new philosophy ; and it is a matter of surprise that its truth was so soon recognized.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1889

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