Winding Trail to Newton's Principia Mathematica

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A01=Jed Z. Buchwald
A01=Mordechai Feingold
Author_Jed Z. Buchwald
Author_Mordechai Feingold
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Centripetal force
Circle radius
Circular motion
Colliding bodies
Collision
Comet
Conduitt
Conical pendulum
Curvature
Curve
Deflecting force
Demonstration
Descartes
Directed focus
Dynamical reciprocity
Earth
Ellipse
Elliptical
Elliptical path
Endeavor
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Ether
Force
forthcoming
Geometrical
Gravitation
Gregory
Halley
Hooke
Hooke newton
Huygens
Hypothesis
Inverse square
Inverse square force
Isaac
Isaac newton
Kepler
Kepler law
Latus rectum
Lectures
Liber secundus
Magnitude
Mathematical
Mathematics
Motion
Motu
Newton
Newton construction
Orthogonal
Parallelogram
Parallelogram construction
Pendulum
Perpendicular
Philosophical transactions
Planetary
Planetary motion
Power gravity
Proportional
Requisite
Resistance
Rule
Square force
Tangent
Trajectory
Traversed equal
Trinity
Universal gravitation
Velocity
Wallis
Wren
Ye earth

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691287782
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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An intellectual biography of the seventeenth-century masterwork that set down the laws of motion and universal gravitation and ushered in modern physics

Long regarded as one of the most important works in the history of science, Isaac Newton’s Principia laid the mathematical foundations of classical mechanics, planetary motion, and the laws of gravity. Jed Buchwald and Mordechai Feingold trace the long, wandering path by which these groundbreaking ideas took shape—beginning with the brilliant insights of a newly minted Cambridge BA and culminating in the publication of Newton’s magnum opus in 1687.

Drawing on fresh perspectives from Newton’s manuscripts and related documents, Buchwald and Feingold situate him firmly within the vibrant scientific milieu of mid-seventeenth-century Cambridge. They explore the interactions with mentors and other contemporaries, emphasizing Newton’s distinctive approach to linking motion with the emerging, new mathematics of the era. What develops is a portrait of a restless young scholar, prone to diving deep into a subject only to lose interest, until a letter, a conversation, or a visit would rekindle his interest. For nearly two decades prior to Edmond Halley’s pivotal visit in 1684, Newton engaged only sporadically with celestial mechanics. In a narrative of fits and starts, Buchwald and Feingold show how, inspired or assisted by figures such as Isaac Barrow, Robert Hooke, John Flamsteed, and Halley, Newton gradually refined his ideas into what would become one of the most revolutionary books ever written.

Jed Z. Buchwald is the Doris and Henry Dreyfuss Professor of History at the California Institute of Technology. His books include (with Diane Greco Josefowicz) The Riddle of the Rosetta (Princeton). Mordechai Feingold is the Kate Van Nuys Page Professor of the History of Science and the Humanities at the California Institute of Technology. His books include (with Jed Z. Buchwald) Newton and the Origin of Civilization (Princeton).

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