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issac Newton


Isaacs's aim at Cambridge was to receive a law degree. He was known to associate with higher class students rather then other sizars. He was deeply engrossed in private studies of Descartes, Gassendi, hobbes and especially Boyle. Throughout his life he preferred to work alone, in exception for his roommate John Wickins, he was Newton's assistant for twenty years. There isn't much evidence to Isaac's college years, but he was elected a scholar on April 28, 1664 following his bachelor's degree in April of 1665. As soon as the plague entered England the school closed for two years and Isaac went back to Woolsthorpe. Within the two years, Isaac's light bulb that many have been trying to turn on was finally brighter then ever.
             Newton was born into the Anglican church and the public conformed to it. At about thirty, he thought that Trinitarianism was a fraud and that Arianism was the true form of ancient Christianity. He believed in god, not as a matter of compulsion but in the deformed and weft of his understanding of nature. He felt god was a living and powerful lord having authority over all things. Newton's god made the rules to how the universe operates. Newton's religion played a significant role in how he worked, hypothetically speaking, god was always watching over Newton's shoulder.
             Descartes natural philosophy concerning the nature of the universe really made Newton upset. Descartes posed two problems, the mechanics of impact and of circular motion. Both of these proposed a problem because Descartes analyzed impact in terms of the force internal to a moving body. Newton anticipated that a body will continue in its state unless an external force is acted upon it. This conclusion is still known today as the Conservation of Momentum. Newton did agree that a body in circular motion wants to withdraw from the center. By doing a few experiments he constructed a formula; f=m2v/r, that we still use today in mechanics of circular motion.


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