Before Newton
A comprehensive re-evaluation of Isaac Barrow (1630–1677), one of the more prominent and intriguing of all seventeenth-century men of science. Barrow is remembered today - if at all - only as Sir Isaac Newton's mentor and patron, but he in fact made important contributions to the disciplines of optics and geometry. Moreover, he was a prolific and influential preacher as well as a renowned classical scholar. By seeking to understand Barrow's mathematical work, primarily within the confines of the pre-Newtonian scientific framework, the book offers a substantial rethinking of his scientific acumen. In addition to providing a biographical study of Barrow, it explores the intimate connections among his scientific, philological and religious worldviews in an attempt to convey the complexity of the seventeenth-century culture that gave rise to Isaac Barrow, a breed of polymath that would become increasingly rare with the advent of modern science.
Product details
June 2008Paperback
9780521063852
396 pages
234 × 156 × 20 mm
0.554kg
Available
Table of Contents
- List of contributors
- Editor's preface
- 1. Isaac Barrow: divine, scholar, mathematician Mordechai Feingold
- 2. The Optical Lectures and the foundations of the theory of optical imagery Alan E. Shapiro
- 3. Barrow's mathematics: between ancients and moderns Michael S. Mahoney
- 4. Isaac Barrow's academic milieu: Interregnum and Restoration Cambridge John Gascoigne
- 5. Barrow as a scholar Anthony Grafton
- 6. The preacher Irène Simon
- 7. Isaac Barrow's library Mordechai Feingold
- Index.