Newton's Scientific Personality
Newton's Scientific Personality
Newton's Scientific Personality
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BY RICHARD S. WESTFALL
Le opere di Galileo Galilei, ed. Antonio Favaro (20 vols. in 21; Florence, 1890-
1901), I, 1-177. An English translation together with a penetrating commentary can be
found in two books by William Wallace, Galileo's Early Notebooks: The Physical Questions
(Notre Dame, 1977), and Galileo and his Sources. The Heritage of the Collegio Romano
551
6 William Whiston, Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Mr. William Whiston (London,
1749), 315-16.
9Huygens coined the phrase "centrifugal force," which Newton did not know in
1666. However, he used other expressions that were strictly synonymous with centrifugal
force; for simplicity I will use Huygens's phrase, which is more familiar to modern
readers.
21 John Ray, The Wisdom of God Manifested in the Works of the Creation (7th ed
London, 1717), 403-5.
22 Basil Willey, "The Touch of Cold Philosophy," in R. F. Jones et al, The Seventeen
Century (Stanford, 1951), 369-76.
are other bits and fragments scattered through the Newton manuscripts. The sole
cussion of this important manuscript, which has only recently been identified among
theological papers, which themselves have only recently become available to scholars,
my article, "Isaac Newton's Theologiae Gentilis Origines Philosophicae," in W. Warr
Wagar (ed.), The Secular Mind (New York, 1982), 15-34.
27 Isaac Newton, Observations on the Prophecies of Daniel, and the Apocalypse of
John (London, 1733), 4-13. Cf. The Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms Amended (Londo
1728), 357-58. Frank Manuel, Isaac Newton, Historian (Cambridge, Mass., 1963),
60.
Indiana University.