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📖 Discover the force behind the force – Newton’s legacy redefined!
This compelling biography by James Gleick explores Isaac Newton’s revolutionary contributions to gravity and the laws of motion, blending historical context with accessible scientific insight. With over 770 reviews averaging 4.3 stars, it’s a must-read for anyone eager to understand the foundations of modern science and the man who changed the world.
| Best Sellers Rank | 211,187 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 393 in Philosopher Biographies 473 in Scientist Biographies 478 in History of Science (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 out of 5 stars 774 Reviews |
A**N
Excellent !
A very fascinating read. Well written - not too technical. It gives an excellent ‘feel’ for the times in which Newton lived. It also depicts the lack of a scientific world at the time. Newton was of course one of the first true scientists, and a pioneer of the application of mathematics to the movement of the earth and planets. Highly commended.
C**T
Not light reading
An interesting book that gives a good introduction to Newton's life. There is not a massive range of biography in the book, and it mainly focuses on the theories and work. If you don't know much about the Maths and Science behind the works, like I don't, it is difficult to understand. However, I have come out of the other side with more knowledge than when I went in, so that must count as an achievement.
L**L
A biographically human Sir Isaac missing no important aspect of the great man's life. Very very readable
James Gleick has offered his readership a scientifically sanitised but predominantly human biography of Sir Isaac Newton. Even when a reader actually works within the world of physical sciences, mathematics or analysis (as I do myself), I believe that sometimes we all wish to understand more about the private life of great, infamous or notable doers and thinkers. Often in his field of work Newton was innovative and his theories were apt to be seminal. Calculus, light, motion, gravity, etc. all confirm his celebrated and deserved status. Additionally, although Gleick's book shows Newton to be idiosyncratic, particular of thought and almost toxically reclusive, Newton is also shown to be sufficiently self-aware to be able to accept and expound the notion that mankind was probably on the verge of exponential cerebral expansion. How right he was. Further, the author reveals Newton as the spiritually-aware scientist, who eventually himself came to believe, that he was merely bringing to light (pun intended) The Creator's own technical and mathematical system by which the whole stable edifice of the known universe was built; and upon the health and well-being of which the world's very continuation would depend. As a writer, Gleick excels himself in demonstrating Sir Isaac's paradoxically insular behaviour to peers and contemporaries whilst masking such a brilliantly extrovert mind containing such an unrivalled capacity for almost unbridled reason and accurate prognosis. The modern sub-atomic and algorithmically-charged machine-learning world today owes Newton so very much for pointing the way forward, but I believe readers have a debt also to Gleick for conjuring in homage Newton the man in an obviously admiring but readable style. If you are interested, then please see my reviews on 'Newton's Gift' (Berlinski) - offering some maths and science; 'Isaac Newton The Last Sorcerer,' (White) - offering biography and alchemical adventures; and also 'Newton and the Counterfeiter' (Levenson) - offering the lesser-known Newton as 'Royal Mint 'production director' and 'counter-counterfeiting sleuth and thief-taker.' Enjoy your Newtonian reading.
A**R
Hit or miss
To be fair, it is exactly what it is meant to be. However I found it to be dry and uninteresting, and it took quite a lot of effort to continue reading. Not sure if it's the writer or Newton that is to blame for this though. Nevertheless it is something that should be read by anybody with an interest in science.
O**N
Brief and insightful biography of a singular man
James Gleick certainly never lets you get bored. This biography of Sir Isaac Newton - a man who lived an improbable eighty four years and in that time invented much of mathematics, classical physics and optics, postulated gravity, ran the Royal Mint, relentlessly persecuted forgers and secretly devoted a fair bit of his life to alchemy - is done and dusted in under 200 generously margined pages, so being of a short attention span is no barrier. This is a great book: Gleick's prose, while undeniably efficient, is nonetheless possessed of a disarming elegance and his analysis is insightful and engaging: I found myself lowering the book and staring into space pondering its implications a good deal. We tend to think of Newton as the father of the modern enlightenment without concluding that, ergo, the times he inhabited were QED un-enlightened. This makes the amount and scope of a single man's achievement all the more stunning: parameters we take absolutely for granted - such as the measurable and consistent passage of time - for most purposes, just didn't exist: it was by Newton's singular and cantankerous will that we became "enlightened" at all. Science, mathematics philosophy and religion were simply not the carefully compartmentalised and ontologically parsed disciplines they are today: they were merely different aspects of the same tangled skein. Gleick also records how indebted our now "untangled" skein is to Newton's ministrations: were the programmes of Robert Hooke or Gottfried Leibniz - great antagonists of Newton's in their day - to have prevailed, the uncomfortable suspicion is that our scientific landscape now might look very different. Newton's famous deference to the shoulders of giants was in reality uttered in false modesty with reference to a competitor, Hooke, whom he despised. That fact alone ought to trouble the more revisionist historians of science. Indeed, "a slightly naughty thought" occurs to Hermann Bondi: "we may still be so much under the impression of the particular turn he took ... We cannot get it out of our system". Quite. This is a deft and elegant biography. Well recommended. Olly Buxton
B**B
inexplicable blossoming
Highly readable, well written compact account of the ultimate English genius. Would have liked more on his early years to the age of 26, especially his inexplicable blossoming as a mathematical genius in his mid 20's - alas probably little is known. He was of humble birth and not hot-housed in any way.
Z**4
Isaac Newton by James Gleick
This book gives great insight into not just the mind of Newton but the times in which he lived and the barriers not just to living but to producing such quality science and maths
D**S
Brilliant Brain of Newton!
From one of the best writers on science, a remarkable portrait of Isaac Newton. The man who changed our understanding of the universe, of science and of faith. Isaac Newton was the chief architect of the modern world. He answered the ancient philosophical riddles of light and motion; he effectively discovered gravity; he salvaged the terms 'time', 'space', 'motion' and 'place' from the haze of everyday language, standardized them and married them, each to the other, constructing an edifice that made knowledge a thing of substance: quantative and exact. Creation, Newton demonstrated, unfolds from simple rules, patterns iterated over unlimited distances. What Newton learned remains the essence of what we know. Newton's laws are our laws. When we speak of momentum, of forces and masses, we are seeing the world as Newtonians. When we seek mathematical laws for economic cycles and human behaviour, we stand on Newton's shoulders. Our very deeming the universe as solvable is his legacy. This was the achievement of a reclusive professor, recondite theologian and fervent alchemist. A man, who feared the light of exposure, shrank from controversy and seldom published his work....a great read!
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