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  • The standard story of the Scientific Revolution culminates with the long life of one man:

  • Sir Isaac Newton—a humble servant of the Royal Mint, two-time parliamentarian, and

  • a scientific titan whose name, along with Einstein's, is synonymous with physics today.

  • But there was also another Isaac Newton.

  • I mean, it was the same guy, but this Newton was very different from the mythic, hyper-rational one.

  • This Sir Isaac Newton was also an alchemist, obsessed with the occultwith hidden, non-rational truths.

  • And every story's leading character has to have a foil, right?

  • Enter Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz, an equally remarkable master of mathematics.

  • Together, these rival geniuses would change the worlds of math and science forever.

  • [INTRO MUSIC PLAYS]

  • Ike was born prematurely on what was thenit's

  • a long storyChristmas Day in 1642 in the delightfully named hamlet of Woolsthorpe-by-Colsterworth.

  • Which is known formostly just being the place where Isaac Newton was born.

  • Newton's family was not well off.

  • His dad died, and his mom remarried and had a bunch more kids.

  • Farming in rural Lincolnshire?

  • Not fun.

  • And in school, Ike was bullied.

  • But he discovered that he loved learning, and so, to no one's surprise, he did fine

  • at Trinity College, Cambridge, on scholarship.

  • And bydid fine,” I mean that he first dreamed up the mathematical system that would

  • become calculus before he even graduated.

  • Calculus is the mathematics that describes how a thing change instantaneously, whether

  • that thing is velocity, acceleration, displacement, height, weight, volume, or whatever.

  • It provided a new mathematical connection between displacement, velocity, and acceleration

  • all of which are required if you want to understand things like planetary motion.

  • This is all the more amazing because Ike was poor, he wasn't tutored at the best schools,

  • andat the time he went there in 1661—Cambridge was a backwater college.

  • Fifty years after Bacon's new, experiment-focused science, Cambridge was still teaching Aristotle!

  • In 1666, soon after Newton graduated, Cambridge closed for the year due to fear of the bubonic

  • plague.

  • Newton went back home to Lincolnshire and had what we now call his annus mirabalis or

  • miracle year.”

  • In one year, Newtondiscovered the laws of gravity when an apple supposedly fell on

  • his headalthough this probably didn't actually happen.

  • And he laid down the core ideas that would lead to his inventing calculusor co-inventing it.

  • And he started to develop the theory of light and colors, which holds that white light

  • is made up of seven visible colors.

  • By any measure, Newton had an outstanding 1666.

  • That was not true of everyone, however: that fall, a Great Fire swept through London for four

  • days, destroying much of the city.

  • Plus, you know, plague.

  • But, like I mentioned, there was another side of this legendary thinker:

  • Newton was a wee bit eccentric.

  • This almost created a professional problem for him, because for a while, Cambridge required

  • professors to become Anglican priests, and he wasn't exactly an orthodox Christian.

  • Newton thought the Holy Trinity was nonsense.

  • He believed he had unique access to a secret treasure of wisdomboth religious and scientificpassed

  • down from God to Noah, then Moses, then Pythagoras, and then himself.

  • Newton was also a major alchemistas were his buddies, Robert Boyle and John Locke.

  • But Newton was obsessed with alchemy, or thinking philosophically about stuff by changing it.

  • While he didn't view alchemy as separate from his more scientific-looking investigations

  • intowhat is stuff,” he didn't stray far from the alchemical mainstream.

  • He kept his furnaces burning for days on end, transmuting metals.

  • In fact, the largest section of his complete works concerns alchemy!

  • That said, Newton wasn't interested in trying to turn lead into gold.

  • He was just trying to understand everything.

  • Newton returned to work at Cambridge in 1667, continuing to work on his revolutionary insights.

  • He first published on optics, in 1672 in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society.

  • With what became known as hiscrucial experiment,” Newton showed that light is composed of rays

  • of different colors that can be split using a prism, and that these rays can't be further

  • split by a second prism.

  • And that the color of light can be brought back to white using a mirror.

  • BOOM.

  • Okay, this may not sound like a mic drop by today's standards.

  • But at the time, there was a lot of debate about the relationship between color and light.

  • Newton theorized that light is made of different colors that are visible only when refracted,

  • or bent.

  • Newton's fellow science-genius, Robert Hooke, believed that light is wave, whereas Newton,

  • like René Descartes, believed light is a “corpuscle,” or particle.

  • Newton's paper on optics earned him membership in the Royal Society.

  • It also proved to be quite controversial.

  • Many of Newton's peers still believed in an Aristotelian version of optical physics,

  • and others believed in Descartes's version.

  • The debate went on for decades, leading Newton to shun public life.

  • Through his work on optics, Newton also developed the first functional reflecting telescope,

  • using a mirror to focus light.

  • Newton's work on light was collected in the 1704 book Opticks.

  • By then, Newtonian optics had beaten out its Aristotelian and Cartesian competitors.

  • But that's not all, because it's Newton, so of course it's not.

  • He concluded Opticks with a series ofqueries,” or questions.

  • Though they weren't really questions, but rhetorical statements meant to guide further research.

  • In the first edition, there were sixteen queries.

  • As he continued his own research, Newton added more queries in subsequent editions, up to

  • thirty one.

  • The queries went way beyond optical physics, concerning the nature and transmission of

  • heat, the possible cause of gravity, electricity, how God created matterin the Beginning,”

  • the proper way to do science, and the ethical conduct of human beings.

  • As much as the work on optics itself, these queries influenced science for centuries.

  • But a new paradigm in optics isn't what Newton is best known for.

  • Nor for making the first calculation of the speed of sound.

  • Nor for all of his other brilliant ideas.

  • Newton is best known as the person whoone, mathematically perfected the astronomical

  • system of Copernicus, Kepler and Galileo, which we spent two episodes on;

  • Two, mathematically described how gravity works, setting the stage for classical mechanics;

  • and, three, introduced calculus to the world.

  • You may think this is too much to cram into one bookbut then you wouldn't be Ike.

  • Newton dropped The Mathematical Principles

  • of Natural Philosophy, or simply Principia, in 1687.

  • Work on the book began a few years earlier, when Edmund Halleythe astronomer after whom Halley's

  • comet is namedasked Newton about his thoughts about Kepler's model of planetary motion.

  • How did the sun invisibly control the planets?

  • Newton took a few years, but what he delivered was a book that gave a fairly complete answer.

  • In fact, almost none of Newton's contemporaries could fully understand Principia, the math

  • was so dense!

  • Principia was made up of three books.

  • It begins with axioms, or core principles.

  • In the introduction, Newton explains that, if you take his system, you get Galileo's

  • law of falling bodies.

  • Book one focused on the motion of bodies in free space, laying out the core principles

  • of calculus, the branch of mathematics that concerns derivatives and integrals.

  • Newton described how centripetal force works, exploring the implications of his math regarding

  • how objects move.

  • But Newton discussed calculus in terms of geometry becauserememberno one else

  • had ever heard of calculus before!

  • Book two concerned the movement of bodies in a restricted medium like a fluid, instead

  • of a free space.

  • This was Newton's answer to Descartes, whose system proposed that the planets move through

  • a fluid æther.

  • Book three, finally, turned to celestial mechanics.

  • Newton specified for the first time that gravity was the force holding all of the planets in

  • their orbits around the sun.

  • With this book, he unified the work of Descartes, Galileo, Kepler, and Copernicus

  • into one mathematically sound system.

  • This was the first time that natural philosophers in Europe had had a single system for understanding

  • what stuff is and how it moves since Aristotle.

  • Newton's work in math is a good example of a new mechanical intelligibility in science.

  • Mechanical intelligibility is just the idea that a fact about nature is true because we

  • can do stuff with itsay, predict the motions of planetseven if we don't understand

  • what itlike, gravityreally is.

  • Now, for all the awesomeness that is Newton, the story of the other person who invented

  • calculus is equally impressive.

  • Introduce us, ThoughtBubble!

  • Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz was born in

  • Leipzig, in what was then the Holy Roman Empire, in 1646.

  • He wrote his first book, De Arte Combinatoria, or On the Combinatorial Art, at the age of

  • nineteen, in that fateful year, 1666.

  • Leibniz worked on almost every area of natural philosophyreshaping how libraries work,

  • inventing the mechanical calculator, creating the binary notation that would centuries later

  • be central to computer science, and becoming a major figure in philosophy.

  • Leibniz worked out elements of calculus in 1675, independently of Newton.

  • And we actually use Leibniz's version, not Newton's!

  • But in 1676, Leibniz traveled to London.

  • This trip would become the primary evidence in the long-standing priority dispute, or

  • argument about who invented calculus first.

  • The English math posse accused the German of having glimpsed Newton's unpublished

  • notes.

  • What did Leibniz discover back in 1675, over a decade before the publication of Principia?

  • He used integral calculus for the first time in history to find the area under the graph

  • of a function.

  • Which might not sound impressive, but it is.

  • In doing so, he made up some important notation, or symbols, including the d for differentials

  • and the integral sign, which is a long S standing for the Latin wordsumma,” or highest.

  • We still use Leibniz's notation today.

  • But Leibniz didn't publish his calculus until 1684.

  • And he didn't lay out his full theory, expressing the inverse relation of integration and differentiationAKA

  • the fundamental theorem of calculusuntil 1693, well after Principia.

  • This delay, along with a growing rivalry between thinkers from different nations, meant that

  • Leibniz never really got the credit he deserved.

  • The Royal Society favored Newton from the start.

  • They never gave Leibniz a chance to offer his version of events, ruling in favor of

  • Newtonthe Society's presidentin 1713.

  • Thanks Thoughtbubble. Until he died, Leibniz had to fight to prove

  • that he had invented calculus without consulting Newton's notes.

  • And there is still no complete edition of the writings of Leibniz available in English!

  • Now, the role of the Royal Society in this dispute is worth pointing out here, because

  • this was the time when scientific societies were first coming into existence.

  • These were salons where natural philosophers could debate ideas.

  • The first major scientific societymentioned in our first episodewas the Royal Society

  • of London, founded in 1660 and given a royal charter in 1662.

  • Here, natural philosophers held weekly discussions.

  • The Society consisted of elected members orFellows of the Royal Society,” who add

  • the lettersFRSafter their names.

  • Robert Hooke became the Royal Society's official Curator of Experiments, and Newton

  • served as president between 1703 and 1727.

  • The Royal Society was not alone.

  • The Academy of Sciences in Paris was established in 1666, based out of the Louvre.

  • The Academy maintained the royal observatories and held public salons.

  • The nearby Royal Garden, founded in 1626 and opened to the public in

  • 1640, also served as a way of spreading new ideas about science.

  • Importantly, scientific societies functioned as publishers.

  • In addition to journals sharing the latest discoveries, such as the Royal Society's

  • Philosophical Transactions, they printed field-defining books such as Hooke's Micrographia in 1665

  • and Newton's Principia in 1687.

  • Scientific societies were also a place for debate, including the super unfair one between

  • Newton and Leibniz over calculus.

  • With the exchange of ideas that scientific societies facilitated, natural philosophy

  • became a public enterprise.

  • Printing and the availability of mail between nationseven rivals, sometimes at war with

  • one anotherbecame crucial for the production of knowledge.

  • But the societies also helped generate a new need in early modern Europe for expert knowledge,

  • by showing the utility of science, securing government patronage, and helping to develop

  • commercial applications for the discoveries of their members.

  • We can never properly repay Woolsthorpe-by-Colsterworth for its contribution to the history of science.

  • But the bigger point is that Newton was part of a whole scientific culture engaged in lively

  • internal debate about what counts as valid knowledge and what to do with it.

  • By the time Newton left Cambridge to become superintendent of the Royal Mint, in 1696,

  • the paradigm for scientific knowledge production in Europe had definitively shifted away from

  • Aristotle and toward Galileo and Baconand Ike and Leibniz.

  • Next timeget ready to get your phlogist-onand then gone: we're revolutionizing chemistry

  • with Lavoisier!

  • Crash Course History of Science is filmed in the Dr. Cheryl C. Kinney Studio in Missoula, MT.

  • And it is made possible with the help of all these nice people. And our animation team, is Thought Cafe.

  • Crash Course is a Complexly production. If you wanna keep imagining the world complexly with us

  • check out some of our other channels like The Financial Diet, Scishow Space, and Mental Floss.

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The standard story of the Scientific Revolution culminates with the long life of one man:

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