Newton and the Origin of Civilization

Newton and the Origin of Civilization

Newton and the Origin of Civilization

Newton and the Origin of Civilization

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Overview

Isaac Newton's Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms Amended, published in 1728, one year after the great man's death, unleashed a storm of controversy. And for good reason. The book presents a drastically revised timeline for ancient civilizations, contracting Greek history by five hundred years and Egypt's by a millennium. Newton and the Origin of Civilization tells the story of how one of the most celebrated figures in the history of mathematics, optics, and mechanics came to apply his unique ways of thinking to problems of history, theology, and mythology, and of how his radical ideas produced an uproar that reverberated in Europe's learned circles throughout the eighteenth century and beyond.


Jed Buchwald and Mordechai Feingold reveal the manner in which Newton strove for nearly half a century to rectify universal history by reading ancient texts through the lens of astronomy, and to create a tight theoretical system for interpreting the evolution of civilization on the basis of population dynamics. It was during Newton's earliest years at Cambridge that he developed the core of his singular method for generating and working with trustworthy knowledge, which he applied to his study of the past with the same rigor he brought to his work in physics and mathematics. Drawing extensively on Newton's unpublished papers and a host of other primary sources, Buchwald and Feingold reconcile Isaac Newton the rational scientist with Newton the natural philosopher, alchemist, theologian, and chronologist of ancient history.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780691154787
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 11/11/2012
Pages: 544
Product dimensions: 7.50(w) x 10.90(h) x 1.80(d)

About the Author

Jed Z. Buchwald is the Doris and Henry Dreyfuss Professor of History at the California Institute of Technology. His books include The Zodiac of Paris: How an Improbable Controversy over an Ancient Egyptian Artifact Provoked a Modern Debate between Religion and Science (Princeton). Mordechai Feingold is professor of history at the California Institute of Technology. He is the author of The Newtonian Moment: Isaac Newton and the Making of Modern Culture.

Table of Contents

List 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

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"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

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