 http://www.librarything.com/work.php?book=1708066 1855 edition
| Isaac Newton (1643–1727)Also known as: Issac Newton, Sir Issac Newton, Sir Issac Newton, Sir Isaac Newton, Isaac Newton, Sir, Isaac, Sir; H.S.Thayer - Editor Newton ... (see complete list) | 788 | 6 | (3.76) | 0 | 0 |
Top members (works)ThomasJefferson (6), Cesalpino (6), johnandlisa (5), appleby (5), JosephPriestley (4), brewbooks (4), akbrumley (4), prufrock9 (4), kirja (4), SamuelJohnsonLibrary (3), jaoswald (3), donandpatti (3), bibliophiles (3), chuck_ralston (3), natantus (3) — more Legacy LibrariesThomas Jefferson (6), Joseph Priestley (4), Samuel Johnson (3), John Adams (2), Joseph Stevens Buckminster (2), William Butler Yeats (1), Walker Percy (1), Pennsylvania General Assembly (1), George Wythe (1), Benjamin Franklin (1) — 1 more, Samuel Gardner Drake (1) Member favorites
|
|
| Canonical name |
|
| Legal name |
|
| Other names |
|
| Date of birth |
|
| Date of death |
|
| Burial location |
|
| Gender |
|
| Nationality |
|
| Places of residence |
|
| Education |
|
| Occupations |
|
| Relationships |
|
| Organizations |
|
| Awards and honors |
|
| Agents |
|
| Short biography |
|
| Disambiguation notice |
|
|
Author DisambiguationHow many authors?Isaac Newton is currently considered a "single author." If one or more works are by a distinct, homonymous authors, go ahead and split the author.
This entry includes…
Combine with…
What?
Q: What is this feature for/why is it necessary?
A: Because LibraryThing draws from so many different libraries, it can't enforce a single name for a given author. "Also known as"
lets LibraryThing users combine author's names easily,
so collections match up and everything runs smoothly.
Q: Can I combine with an author not suggested above?
A: Yes you can.
Q: I know an author is separate, but some well-meaning but deplorably uninformed person keeps combining them! Can I take a name off the combination list?
A: Yes you can.
Look up! Everything in the "Combine with..." section now has a link to "never combine." Use this feature wisely. "Marc Twain" may be idiotic, but misspelling should still be combined. "Mark Twain" and "Edward Gibbon" should not.
Q: What authors have already been slated to "never combine" with this author?
A: No authors.
Q: I am said person and I'm right!
A: Take it to the Combiners group.
|