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4Chapter
Down to the year 1687, when the “Principia” was published, Newton had
lived the life of a recluse at Cambridge, being entirely occupied with those
transcendent researches to which we have referred. But in that year he issued
from his seclusion under circumstances of considerable historical interest.
King James the Second attempted an invasion of the rights and privileges of
the University of Cambridge by issuing a command that Father Francis, a
Benedictine monk, should be received as a Master of Arts in the University,
without having taken the oaths of allegiance and supremacy. With this
arbitrary command the University sternly refused to comply. The Vice-
Chancellor was accordingly summoned to answer for an act of contempt to
the authority of the Crown. Newton was one of nine delegates who were
chosen to defend the independence of the University before the High Court.
They were able to show that Charles the Second, who had issued a mandamus
under somewhat similar circumstances, had been induced after due
consideration to withdraw it. This argument appeared satisfactory, and the
University gained their case. Newton’s next step in public life was his
election, by a narrow majority, as member for the University, and during the
years 1688 and 1689, he seems to have attended to his parliamentary duties
with considerable regularity.
An incident which happened in 1692 was apparently the cause of
considerable disturbance in Newton’s equanimity, if not in his health. He had
gone to early morning chapel, leaving a lighted candle among his papers on
his desk. Tradition asserts that his little dog “Diamond” upset the candle; at
all events, when Newton came back he found that many valuable papers had
perished in a conflagration. The loss of these manuscripts seems to have had a
serious effect. Indeed, it has been asserted that the distress reduced Newton to
a state of mental aberration for a considerable time. This has, apparently, not
been confirmed, but there is no doubt that he experienced considerable
disquiet, for in writing on September 13th, 1693, to Mr. Pepys, he says:
” I am extremely troubled at the embroilment I am in, and have neither ate
nor slept well this twelvemonth, nor have my former consistency of mind.”
Notwithstanding the fame which Newton had achieved by the publication
of his “Principia,” and by all his researches, the State had not as yet taken any
notice whatever of the most illustrious man of science that this or any other
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book Great Astronoms - Isaac Newton"
Great Astronoms
Isaac Newton
- Title
- Great Astronoms
- Subtitle
- Isaac Newton
- Author
- Robert S. Ball
- Date
- 1907
- Language
- English
- License
- PD
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 22
- Keywords
- Astronom, Philosopher, Englisch, English, Astronomie, Philosophie
- Categories
- International
- Naturwissenschaften Physik