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Isaac Newton was 19 when he began his scientific at Cambridge University in England. He arrived at school in 1661 and began studying the work of Aristotle. The teachings of Aristotle had been the primary theories of science and nature for almost two thousand years. Aristotle had tried to explain the workings of the universe and nature in qualitative rather than quantitative terms. There were many more modern theories of nature and how it worked, but when Newton began his studies at Cambridge, all the universities taught only Aristotelianism.
Newton was learning about particles and their interaction when he began his studies in math. In little more than a year he had mastered, algebra, classical geometry, and the application of algebraic techniques to solve problems of geometry. Newton soon began to develop new math techniques, including calculus. Calculus was required to study motion. Without calculus, the study of physics would not have been possible. Armed with his natural mathematical talent and his knowledge of the mechanical philosophers, Newton was destined for a most remarkable career in science. Even though many of Newton's experiments and discoveries were accomplished at a young age, most were documented only in his notebooks. It was not until he was 42 that he began to write. His first book was called Principia Mathematica Philosophae Naturalis (Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy). It is generally accepted as the greatest scientific book ever written. Another of his books, Opticks (Optics), dealt with his work on light.
References: Conceptual Physics (fourth edition). Paul G. Hewitt. Little Brown and Company. 1981 Introduction to Optics (second edition). Fran L. Pedrotti, S.J. and Leno S. Pedrotti. Prentice Hall, 1993. "Newton, Sir Isaac" Britannica Online. http://www.eb.com:180/cgi-bin/g?DocF=micro/715/27.html
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