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  1. El Trinity College es uno de los colleges que constituyen la Universidad de Cambridge en Cambridge, Inglaterra. El Trinity College tiene más miembros que ningún otro college en Cambridge u Oxford, con unos 660 estudiantes, 430 estudiantes de postgrado y más de 160 profesores y miembros del college. 1 Es también el más rico de los college ...

  2. Trinity College Notebook. Author: Isaac Newton Metadata: Early-mid 1660s, in Latin and English, c. 3,243 words, 50pp. Source: R.4.48c, Trinity College Library ...

  3. Estátua de Newton no Trinity College da Universidade de Cambridge, no Reino Unido. Das cerca de dez milhões de palavras escritas nos trabalhos de Newton, cerca de um milhão trata de alquimia. Muitos dos escritos de Newton sobre alquimia são cópias de outros manuscritos, com suas próprias anotações. [125]

  4. En el año de 1661, logró ingresar en el Trinity College de la Universidad de Cambridge, en la cual estudió matemáticas bajo la dirección del también matemático Isaac Barrow. Su título de bachiller le fue otorgado en 1665 y lo nombraron becario en Trinity College en el año 1667 (De 1665 a 1667 la Universidad de Cambridge estuvo cerada por la peste y Newton se vió en la necesidad de ...

  5. Eighteenth Century Accounts. The Life of Sir Isaac Newton with an Account of his Works, by Bernard le Bovier de Fontenelle (London, 1728) A Discourse concerning the Nature and Certainty of Sir Isaac Newton's Methods of Fluxions and of Prime and Ultimate Ratios, by Benjamin Robins (London, 1735) See also material relevant to the Analyst ...

  6. Isaac Newton was born in Lincolnshire, near Grantham, on December 25, 1642, and died at Kensington, London, on March 20, 1727. He was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, and lived there from 1661 till 1696, during which time he produced the bulk of his work in mathematics; in 1696 he was appointed to a valuable Government office, and moved ...

  7. 19 de dic. de 2007 · 1. Newton's Life. Newton's life naturally divides into four parts: the years before he entered Trinity College, Cambridge in 1661; his years in Cambridge before the Principia was published in 1687; a period of almost a decade immediately following this publication, marked by the renown it brought him and his increasing disenchantment with Cambridge; and his final three decades in London, for ...