In 1642, Sir Isaac Newton was born premature on Christmas day in Woolsthorpe, a village near Grantham in Lincolnshire. Even though he was fatherless at birth, he was named after his uneducated father (Hatch). Even though …show more content…
He lived with the headmaster, and despite suggestions that he had previously shown no academic promise, Isaac must have convinced teachers that he did have academic promise. He was one of the top students in his class (Pettinger).Nobody knows about what Isaac learnt in preparation for college, but his headmaster was an intelligent man and undoubtedly gave Isaac private coaching and a good education (Roberson). He passed his final exams with good results, and he was able to go to Trinity College, Cambridge (Pettinger).
Newton entered college on June 5, 1661. He was elder to most of his peers, but despite the fact that his mother was financially wealthy, he entered as a sizar. A sizar at Cambridge was a student who got paid toward college expenses in exchange for acting as a servant to other students. Although he was a sizar, be seemed to associate better with the “better class” students than the sizars …show more content…
In Book I of Principia, Isaac began with the three laws of motion and definitions now known as Newton’s laws of motion. It contained action and reaction, laws of inertia, and acceleration proportional to force. Book II showed Newton’s original scientific idea which came to replace Cartesianism. Lastly, Book III contained applications of his dynamics, including an explanation for tides and a theory of lunar motion. Isaac also correctly expressed and solved the first ever problem in the calculous of variations which involved finding the surface of revolution which would give the lowest resistance to flow