Reminder: Newton's Principia conference, 11-13 December
A reminder of the Newton conference taking place at
the Royal Society on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday this week.
Please note that the opening time for Wednesday
registration has been moved back from 1:00pm to 1:30pm.
'A great variety of admirable
discoverys': Newton's Principia in the Age of Enlightenment
Wednesday 11 December – Friday 13 December 2013
The Royal Society, 6-9 Carlton House Terrace, London
Full programme and registration available at http://royalsociety.org/events/2013/newtons-principia/
This conference commemorates the 300th anniversary of
the second edition of Isaac Newton's Principia Mathematica (1713), one
of the key texts in the history of science. This was no hasty redrafting of the
first edition (1687), but a substantially rewritten volume that provided firmer
evidence for Newton’s claims about tides, cometary orbits, lunar motion and
universal gravitation. Newton brought together new experimental and astronomical
findings and, assisted by editor Roger Cotes, improved his analysis of orbital
dynamics in response to previous criticism.
The work was central to bolstering Newton's defence of
his research at a crucial time in his priority dispute with Leibniz over the
invention of calculus. It also contained the famous 'General Scholium', in
which Newton revealed his belief in a God who was to be revered on account of
his dominion, with the ultimate goal of natural philosophy being a proof of the
attributes of God - views subsequently attacked by Leibniz.
The conference also marks the tercentenary of the Commercium
Epistolicum, a collection of texts arranged by Newton in relation to the
calculus dispute. As Royal Society President, Newton gathered together an international
committee to decide whether Leibniz had been wrongly accused of plagiarising
the calculus from Newton’s writings. This compliant committee, presented with a
wide range of evidence gathered by Newton from his own writings and from the
holdings of the Society, decided against Leibniz's appeal for redress.
Finally, the conference will celebrate the completion
by the Newton Project of the transcription and publication of all of Newton's
religious writings, along with most of his scientific and mathematical work.
Please direct any queries about this conference to library@royalsociety.org.
Rupert Baker
Library Manager
T +44 20 7451 2599
The Royal Society
6-9 Carlton House Terrace
London SW1Y 5AG
royalsociety.org
Registered Charity No 207043
Library Manager
T +44 20 7451 2599
The Royal Society
6-9 Carlton House Terrace
London SW1Y 5AG
royalsociety.org
Registered Charity No 207043