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Isaac Newton by James Gleick
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Isaac Newton

by James Gleick

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576168,253 (3.64)5

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Showing 14 of 14
A solid book on understanding the basic impact Newton had on modern culture. Although the book is small, it contains lots of information from a variety of sources. This book will not give a full appreciation of what Newton achieved but would be a good starting point for those with interest in science history. ( )
  briandarvell | Sep 6, 2009 |
Competent, lively & concise biography of perhaps the first Enlightenment man - & certainly "last of the magicians", as JM Keynes later put it. Speaking personally, the c200pp of text gave me quite what I'd wanted: a general survey of Newton, his main ideas, & significance for the century following him. Perhaps a little short on the mathematics side.

While at it, I'll add another strictly personal remark: I found Newton sympathetic & congenial, despite his superficial unpleasantness. A scientific dictator? Sure. But also one of the great legislators of humanity, alongside Moses, Numa, Solon or (according to some) America's founding fathers. Of course Newton's primary realm was not society, but nature. Yet like every great lawgiver before him, he was all of a piece: brutally uncompromising & relentlessly selfish wherever the integrity of the rule he had devised was at stake. ( )
  nielspeterqm | Aug 24, 2009 |
A very good read. The book traces the life of Sir Isaac Newton through examining his correspondences and publications and gives an account of his insurmountable contributions to natural philosophy and mathematics. As well, it provides insight into his influences, and portrays what this perhaps most important man in the realm of physics and mathematics was really like. The book is as much a page-turner as a book about history can be. I suppose people with an interest in such things as science and natural history, who I suspect would have certain knowledge of the life of Newton anyway, would find this book worth reading. I am one of those. ( )
  siafl | Jun 21, 2009 |
Very good. It uses his biography to set the stage for intelligent discussions of his ideas, not as they're recast and filtered now, but as he and his contemporaries understood them then. Fascinating stuff. I'll have to check out more of Gleick's stuff.
  leeinaustin | Feb 7, 2009 |
I liked it, but I personally find Gleick's prose hard to read sometimes. ( )
  xit1254 | Dec 11, 2008 |
No real revelations here, as far as I can see. A pretty short, plain biography which surprised me since I'm a pretty big fan of Gleick. ( )
  tgraettinger | Oct 13, 2008 |
An absolutely first-rate biography of Isaac Newton by a wonderful science writer. I appreciated this book even more a couple of months ago when I got to hold a first edition of The Principia in my hands at the Crawford Library at the University of Edinburgh. What an experience to open the book and see Newton's own drawing of the limit. The hairs on the back of my neck still tingle to think of it. And my appreciation was so much enhanced by Glick's ability to make Newton come to life on the pages. ( )
  co_coyote | Mar 24, 2008 |
A very interesting portrait. It spends a lot of time on the obsessive, anti-social aspects of Newton's personality: his feuds with Hooke and Liebniz, his delving into theology, his alchemical researches, his sulking refusal to publish his research in a venue that would provide criticism. Engaging. A surprisingly quick read. ( )
  aneel | May 10, 2007 |
Nicely balanced look at Newton’s life and work. A good introduction.

(I'm not a big fan of Newton because of his behavior towards Hooke, but Gleick's account does a lot to redeem him.) ( )
  cmc | Apr 25, 2007 |
Gleick's goal with this book would seem to be to reconcile the marble man who became the god of Western science with the alchemist, the heretic, and the man who waged social war with scorched-earth fervor. Gleick actually succeeds in this, but the new image is not especially attractive and it's hard to say that a great deal of insight is offered into Newton's motivations. Take this as mostly being a study of the birth of the modern scientific community through the filter of Newton's life and achievements. ( )
  Shrike58 | Jul 3, 2006 |
Not as exciting as I hoped, but more a scholarly study of Newton ( )
  steevc | Mar 30, 2006 |
Quite a decent biography of Newton, but could have used some more reference notes. ( )
  jbd1 | Jan 10, 2006 |
Showing 14 of 14

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