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Opticks by Isaac Newton
Opticks by Isaac Newton




The Newton Project Created in 1998, the Newton Project seeks to make facsimiles and transcriptions of Newton’s manuscripts available in electronic form and to display their original connections, along with full documentation relating to Newton’s reading such as written notes and annotations.

  • An Historical Account of Two Notable Corruptions of Scripture (1754).
  • Opticks by Isaac Newton

    Observations on Daniel and The Apocalypse of St.The System of the World, Optical Lectures, The Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms, (Amended) and De mundi systemate (published posthumously in 1728).Reports as Master of the Mint (1701–25).Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica (1687).Of Natures Obvious Laws & Processes in Vegetation (unpublished, c.De analysi per aequationes numero terminorum infinitas (1669, published 1711).However, unlike the Principia, which vowed Non fingo hypotheses or “I make no hypotheses” outside the deductive method, the Opticks develops conjectures about light that go beyond the experimental evidence: for example, that the physical behaviour of light was due its “corpuscular” nature as small particles, or that perceived colours were harmonically proportioned like the tones of a diatonic musical scale. The work is a vade mecum of the experimenter’s art, displaying in many examples how to use observation to propose factual generalisations about the physical world and then exclude competing explanations by specific experimental tests. In an Experimentum crucis or “critical experiment” (Book I, Part II, Theorem ii), Newton showed that the color of light corresponded to its “degree of refrangibility” (angle of refraction), and that this angle cannot be changed by additional reflection or refraction or by passing the light through a coloured filter. The first sentence of the book declares My Design in this Book is not to explain the Properties of Light by Hypotheses, but to propose and prove them by Reason and Experiments. Instead, axioms define the meaning of technical terms or fundamental properties of matter and light, and the stated propositions are demonstrated by means of specific, carefully described experiments.

    Opticks by Isaac Newton Opticks by Isaac Newton

    Unlike the Principia, Opticks is not developed using the geometric convention of propositions proved by deduction from either previous propositions, lemmas or first principles (or axioms). In contrast, few readers of Newton’s time found the Principia accessible or even comprehensible. The book is a model of popular science exposition: although Newton’s English is somewhat dated, the book can still be easily understood by a modern reader. It was first published Read More in English rather than in the Latin used by European philosophers, contributing to the development of a vernacular science literature. Opticks differs in many respects from the Principia.






    Opticks by Isaac Newton