Space: Exploring the Final Frontier in the Archives
 

Creator

Colin Maclaurin

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Creation Date

1-1-1748

Description

A child prodigy, Colin Maclaurin became a professor of mathematics at the University of Aberdeen in Scotland when just 19. While on vacation in London, he became a member of the Royal Society after making the acquaintance of Sir Isaac Newton and other natural philosophers. Several years later, Newton not only recommended Maclaurin to Edinburgh University, the esteemed scientist also offered to pay his salary. Maclaurin died at the age of 48, a few hours after dictating the conclusion of An Account of Sir Isaac Newton’s Philosophical Discoveries, published posthumously in 1748. Highlighting the methodology of induction, deduction, and verification, the book became one of the leading popular expositions of Newtonianism during the Enlightenment, encouraging the application of Newton’s principles to many avenues of inquiry in diverse disciplines and fields.

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