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country has ever produced. Many of his friends had exerted themselves to
procure him some permanent appointment, but without success. It happened,
however, that Mr. Montagu, who had sat with Newton in Parliament, was
appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer in 1694. Ambitious of distinction in
his new office, Mr. Montagu addressed himself to the improvement of the
current coin, which was then in a very debased condition. It fortunately
happened that an opportunity occurred of appointing a new official in the
Mint; and Mr. Montagu on the 19th of March, 1695, wrote to offer Mr.
Newton the position of warden. The salary was to be five or six hundred a
year, and the business would not require more attendance than Newton could
spare. The Lucasian professor accepted this post, and forthwith entered upon
his new duties.
The knowledge of physics which Newton had acquired by his experiments
was of much use in connection with his duties at the Mint. He carried out the
re-coinage with great skill in the course of two years, and as a reward for his
exertions, he was appointed, in 1697, to the Mastership of the Mint, with a
salary between £1,200 and £1,500 per annum. In 1701 his duties at the Mint
being so engrossing, he resigned his Lucasian professorship at Cambridge,
and at the same time he had to surrender his fellowship at Trinity College.
This closed his connection with the University of Cambridge. It should,
however, be remarked that at a somewhat earlier stage in his career he was
very nearly being appointed to an office which might have enabled the
University to retain the great philosopher within its precincts. Some of his
friends had almost succeeded in securing his nomination to the Provostship of
King’s College, Cambridge ; the appointment, however, fell through,
inasmuch as the statute could not be evaded, which required that the Provost
of King’s College should be in holy orders.
In those days it was often the custom for illustrious mathematicians, when
they had discovered a solution for some new and striking problem, to publish
that problem as a challenge to the world, while withholding their own
solution. A famous instance of this is found in what is known as the
Brachistochrone problem, which was solved by John Bernouilli. The nature of
this problem may be mentioned. It was to find the shape of the curve along
which a body would slide down from one point (A) to another point (B) in the
shortest time. It might at first be thought that the straight line from A to B, as
it is undoubtedly the shortest distance between the points, would also be the
path of quickest descent; but this is not so. There is a curved line, down which
a bead, let us say, would run on a smooth wire from A to B in a shorter time
than the same bead would require to run down the straight wire. Bernouilli’s
problem was to find out what that curve must be. Newton solved it correctly;
he showed that the curve was a part of what is termed a cycloid—that is to
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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