Libros > Newton and the Origin of Civilization (Ebook)
Portada de Newton and the Origin of Civilization (ebook)

Newton and the Origin of Civilization (ebook)

Autor:Jed Z. Buchwald, Mordechai Feingold;
Categoría:
ISBN: EB9781400845187
Princeton University Press nos ofrece Newton and the Origin of Civilization (ebook) en inglés, disponible en nuestra tienda desde el 11 de Noviembre del 2012.
Leer argumento »
Ver todas las novedades de libros »

Argumento de Newton and the Origin of Civilization (ebook)

"Those courageous readers who go carefully through this book will learn much more about Newtons work and mind, as well as about early modern science and culture, than most other books provide."--Marco Panza, Journal for the History of Astronomy

"This book is a major step forward in understanding one of the main strands in Newtons intellectual life. . . . This is an exemplary presentation of a key figure in the midst and at the mercy of the intellectual currents of his time."--Peter Barker, Renaissance Quarterly

"Buchwald and Feingold's publication significantly adds to scholarly commentary on Newton. The authors' detailed examination of the making of history in the early modern world clearly demonstrates Newton's novel approach in Chronology and its lasting influence on subsequent history writers who were governed by connoisseurship and taste rather than mathematical certainty."--Aluson Ksiazklliwicz, BJHS

"The reader of Buchwald and Feingold's long awaited book will learn not only about Newton the historian, but also about his theological, alchemical, mathematical, and astronomical work. The authors have something new to say about every facet of Newton's intellectual endeavor: about his peculiar way of working with numbers and data, his anxieties concerning evidence and testimony, his polemics with the English and the French erudites."--Niccolò Guicciardini, author of Isaac Newton on Mathematical Certainty and Method

"This erudite, elegant, and consistently fascinating book is a major contribution to both the history of scholarship and that of science. Buchwald and Feingold examine, in precise and illuminating detail, one of the least understood episodes in the long decline of the encyclopedic idea of learning: Isaac Newton's protracted and serious effort to reconfigure the chronology of the ancient world."--Anthony Grafton, author of Cardano's Cosmos: The Worlds and Works of a Renaissance Astrologer

"A tour de force. Buchwald and Feingold have produced an impressive study of a little known facet of Newton's career, which will surely generate considerable interest in the scholarly community. Newton and the Origin of Civilization traces out a convincing series of linkages between Newton's chronological studies and his more 'mainstream' pursuits."--William R. Newman, author of Atoms and Alchemy: Chymistry and the Experimental Origins of the Scientific Revolution

"Fascinating. . . . [Newton and the Origin of Civilization] is . . . the first serious attempt to solve what might be called the 'Newton three-body problem,' a conundrum at the very center of Newton scholarship today. . . . [T]here is no better starting point for thinking about the Christian theology entangled in Newton's natural science than this book. . . . [A] thoughtful, erudite, and insightful study."--J.B. Shank, Physics Today

"[T]he story that Buchwald and Feingold trace is a rich and complicated one. The debates are mathematically technical and require a good understanding of ancient Egyptian and classical mythology and biblical history. It would be advantageous for the reader to be fluent in these matters; however, given the nature of Newton's overall approach, this book would certainly benefit a more general reader, particularly one interested in debates about the reliability of textual accounts. This study also compliments scholarship on early modern studies of the Earth where mineralogists and geologists used the history of ancient civilizations as an analogy for establishing Earth chronology, and it potentially sheds light on the regular use of astronomy as a model for thinking about credible arguments in late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century geology. As the first study to seriously engage with Newton as a chronologer since Frank Manuel's Isaac Newton, Historian (1963), Buchwald and Feingold's publication significantly adds to scholarly commentary on Newton."--Allison Ksiazkiewicz, British Journal for the History of Science

"Buchwald and Feingold's book is full of remarkable details, insights, and incidents. . . . Certainly, the book is essential reading for anyone with a serious interest either in Newton or in the study of ancient history in the 17th and 18th centuries."--Ernest Davis, SIAM News

"Buchwald and Feingold prove to be excellent guides through this material. . . . They provide a detailed and authoritative commentary. . . . [T]he authors have much to say that is new. . . . Newton specialists should certainly read this book for the many insights the authors offer along the way into Newton's ways of thinking."--John Henry, Science & Education

"Buchwald and Feingold have resuscitated erudite discussions that were dismissed some 300 years ago. As they point out, Newton's own meandering, copious comparisons between obscure minutiae seem designed to deter even the most stalwart of readers, but their own comprehensive account is written in an admirably lucid style. For anyone who shares their fascination with Newton's obsessions, but quails when confronted by his tortuous prose, they have rendered an invaluable service."--Patricia Fara, Metascience

"This argument for intellectual unity in Newton's method of working gives Newton and the Origin of Civlization philosophical as well as historical originality and importance . . . represents a climacteric in our understanding of its subject's life and thought."--Scott Mandelbrote, Times Literary Supplement

"After Gibbon, however, Newton's work as a historian fell into a long oblivion, from which Frank Manuel rescued it in the 1960s; but his elegant study, Isaac Newton: Historian, has now been dwarfed by the labours of Buchwald and Feingold."--Jonathan Reé, London Review of Books

"The authors present a well-crafted argument in an accessible yet scholarly style, adding proof, in an often-neglected area of Newtonian studies, to the claim that Newton's 'eccentric' interests were connected to his scientific pursuits. This book will add value to any informed discussion of the contextual nature of the history of science."--Paul Greenham, Historian

"Newton specialists should certainly read this book for the many insights the authors offer along the way into Newton's ways of thinking."--John Henry, Science and Education

"[N]o one interested in Newton's amazing contribution to science will fail to find in this book much that is of considerable interest. . . . The discussion of evidence and why it needs the constraints of a theory that makes sense of what the senses so badly disclose is the best I have come across, and it will undoubtedly stimulate historians for a chronologically significant period of time."--William R. Shea, International Archive of the History of Science

"Newton and the Origin of Civilization adds considerably to what we know about Newton as a historian and chronologist."--Margaret C. Jacob, Journal of American History0List of Illustrations vii
List of Tables xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction 1

1 Troubled Senses 8

2 Troubled Numbers 44

3 Erudition and Chronology in Seventeenth-Century England 107

4 Isaac Newton on Prophecies and Idolatry 126

5 Aberrant Numbers: The Propagation of Mankind before and after the Deluge 164

6 Newtonian History 195

7 Text and Testimony 222

8 Interpreting Words 246

9 Publication and Reaction 307

10 The War on Newton in England 331

11 The War on Newton in France 353

12 The Demise of Chronology 381

13 Evidence and History 423

Appendix A Signs, Conventions, Dating, and Definitions 437

Appendix B Newton's Computational Methods 441

Appendix C Commented Extracts from Newton's MS Calculations 447

Appendix D Placing Colures on the Original Star Globe 464

Appendix E Hesiod, Thales, and Stellar Risings and Settings 468

Bibliography 489
Index 515

Ultimacomic es una marca registrada por Ultimagame S.L - Ultimacomic.com y Ultimagame.com pertenecen a la empresa Ultimagame S.L - Datos Fiscales: B92641216 - Datos de Inscripción Registral: Inscrita en el Registro Mercantíl de Málaga, TOMO: 3815. LIBRO: 2726. FOLIO: 180. HOJA: MA-77524.
2003 - 2019, COPYRIGHT ULTIMAGAME S.L. - Leer esta página significa estar deacuerdo con la Política de privacidad y de uso