Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 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 ...

  2. Sin embargo, Newton guarda silencio sobre sus descubrimientos y reanuda sus estudios en Cambridge en 1667. De 1667 a 1669, emprende activamente investigaciones sobre óptica y es elegido fellow del Trinity College. En 1669, Barrow renuncia a su cátedra lucasiana de matemáticas y Newton le sucede y ocupa este puesto hasta 1696.

  3. 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 ...

  4. Trinity College (1661–1665) Trinity College (1667–1668) Univerzita v Cambridgi: Pracoviště: Univerzita v Cambridgi: Obory: fyzika, mechanika, matematika, astronomie, přírodní vědy, nebeská mechanika, gravitace, optika, matematická analýza a hybnost: Ocenění: Knight Bachelor (1705) Rodiče: Isaac Newton Sr. a Hannah Ayscough ...

  5. paginas.matem.unam.mx › newton-sir-isaacNewton, Sir Isaac.

    Newton, Sir Isaac. Nació el 4 de enero de 1643 [33] en Woolsthorpe, Lincolnshire, Inglaterra y murió el 31 de marzo de 1727 en Londres, Inglaterra. La vida de Newton puede dividirse entres períodos bastante distintos. El primero es el de su infancia desde 1643 hasta su graduación en 1669. El segundo, que va de 1669 a 1687, fue altamente ...

  6. 1 de dic. de 2017 · If you require any information provided on this website in an alternative format, please contact us on 01223 338400 or email webmaster@trin.cam.ac.uk. The Cambridge papers of Sir Isaac Newton, including his notebooks and an annotated copy of Principia Mathematica at Trinity, have been added to UNESCO’s Interna.

  7. Newton’s ‘Trinity College Notebook’ MS Add. 3996 was used by him as an undergraduate, from about 1661 to 1665. It includes his notes on books he was recommended to read for his studies, but it also shows him starting to read for himself and comment not only on classical sources, but also contemporary natural philosophical writing, such as the works of René Descartes or the Dutch ...