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Auction archive: Lot number 513

NEWTON, Sir Isaac (1643-1727)] Opticks: or, a Treatise of t...

Estimate
US$25,000 - US$35,000
Price realised:
US$62,500
Auction archive: Lot number 513

NEWTON, Sir Isaac (1643-1727)] Opticks: or, a Treatise of t...

Estimate
US$25,000 - US$35,000
Price realised:
US$62,500
Beschreibung:

NEWTON, Sir Isaac (1643-1727)]. Opticks: or, a Treatise of the Reflexions, Refractions, Inflexions and Colours of Light. Also Two Treatises of the Species and Magnitude of Curvilinear Figures. London: Samuel Smith and Benjamin Walford, 1704.
NEWTON, Sir Isaac (1643-1727)]. Opticks: or, a Treatise of the Reflexions, Refractions, Inflexions and Colours of Light. Also Two Treatises of the Species and Magnitude of Curvilinear Figures. London: Samuel Smith and Benjamin Walford, 1704. 4 o (242 x 188 mm). Title printed in red and black. 19 engraved folding plates. Woodcut diagrams and letterpress tables in the text (minor dampstaining to upper margin.) Contemporary panelled calf (light wear to spine ends, spine label renewed). "MY DESIGN IN THIS BOOK IS NOT TO EXPLAIN THE PROPERTIES OF LIGHT BY HYPOTHESES, BUT TO PROPOSE AND PROVE THEM BY REASON AND EXPERIMENTS" (Newton, page 1). FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, with the title printed in red and black within a border and with the imprint, but without the author's name, and with the two treatises on calculus at the end. Opticks was "every bit as revolutionary and challenging, and every bit as controversial as the Principia" (Feingold). Opticks contains Newton's summarisation of his discoveries and theories concerning light and color, from his first published paper in 1672 onward, and includes his work on the spectrum of sunlight, the degrees of refraction associated with different colors, the color circle, the rainbow, "Newton's rings," and his invention of the reflecting telescope. "The core of his work was the observation that the spectrum of colours (formed when a ray of light shines through a glass prism) is stretched along its axis, together with his experimental proof that rays of different colours are refracted to different extents. This causes the stretching, or dispersion, of the spectrum. All previous philosophers and mathematicians had been sure that white light is pure and simple, regarding colours as modifications or qualifications of the white. Newton showed experimentally that the opposite is true" ( PMM ). In contrast to the belief in the simple composition of natural white light, Newton demonstrated that natural white light is a compound of many pure elementary colours which could be separated and recombined at will. The book ends with two mathematical papers in Latin, published to establish Newton's prior claim over Gottfied Wilhelm von Leibnitz (1646-1716) in the invention of the calculus. "In a Letter written to Mr. Leibnitz in the Year 1676 and published by Dr. Wallis, I mentioned a Method by which I had found some general Theorems about squaring Curvilinear Figures, or comparing them with the Conic Sections... And some Years ago I lent out a Manuscript containing such Theorems, and having since met with some Things copied out of it, I have on this Occasion made it publick" (Newton's "Advertisement"). Babson 132; Dibner Heralds of Science 148; Feingold The Newtonian Moment pp. 41-42; Grolier Science 79b; Norman 1588; PMM 172.

Auction archive: Lot number 513
Auction:
Datum:
3 Dec 2010
Auction house:
Christie's
3 December 2010, New York, Rockefeller Center
Beschreibung:

NEWTON, Sir Isaac (1643-1727)]. Opticks: or, a Treatise of the Reflexions, Refractions, Inflexions and Colours of Light. Also Two Treatises of the Species and Magnitude of Curvilinear Figures. London: Samuel Smith and Benjamin Walford, 1704.
NEWTON, Sir Isaac (1643-1727)]. Opticks: or, a Treatise of the Reflexions, Refractions, Inflexions and Colours of Light. Also Two Treatises of the Species and Magnitude of Curvilinear Figures. London: Samuel Smith and Benjamin Walford, 1704. 4 o (242 x 188 mm). Title printed in red and black. 19 engraved folding plates. Woodcut diagrams and letterpress tables in the text (minor dampstaining to upper margin.) Contemporary panelled calf (light wear to spine ends, spine label renewed). "MY DESIGN IN THIS BOOK IS NOT TO EXPLAIN THE PROPERTIES OF LIGHT BY HYPOTHESES, BUT TO PROPOSE AND PROVE THEM BY REASON AND EXPERIMENTS" (Newton, page 1). FIRST EDITION, FIRST ISSUE, with the title printed in red and black within a border and with the imprint, but without the author's name, and with the two treatises on calculus at the end. Opticks was "every bit as revolutionary and challenging, and every bit as controversial as the Principia" (Feingold). Opticks contains Newton's summarisation of his discoveries and theories concerning light and color, from his first published paper in 1672 onward, and includes his work on the spectrum of sunlight, the degrees of refraction associated with different colors, the color circle, the rainbow, "Newton's rings," and his invention of the reflecting telescope. "The core of his work was the observation that the spectrum of colours (formed when a ray of light shines through a glass prism) is stretched along its axis, together with his experimental proof that rays of different colours are refracted to different extents. This causes the stretching, or dispersion, of the spectrum. All previous philosophers and mathematicians had been sure that white light is pure and simple, regarding colours as modifications or qualifications of the white. Newton showed experimentally that the opposite is true" ( PMM ). In contrast to the belief in the simple composition of natural white light, Newton demonstrated that natural white light is a compound of many pure elementary colours which could be separated and recombined at will. The book ends with two mathematical papers in Latin, published to establish Newton's prior claim over Gottfied Wilhelm von Leibnitz (1646-1716) in the invention of the calculus. "In a Letter written to Mr. Leibnitz in the Year 1676 and published by Dr. Wallis, I mentioned a Method by which I had found some general Theorems about squaring Curvilinear Figures, or comparing them with the Conic Sections... And some Years ago I lent out a Manuscript containing such Theorems, and having since met with some Things copied out of it, I have on this Occasion made it publick" (Newton's "Advertisement"). Babson 132; Dibner Heralds of Science 148; Feingold The Newtonian Moment pp. 41-42; Grolier Science 79b; Norman 1588; PMM 172.

Auction archive: Lot number 513
Auction:
Datum:
3 Dec 2010
Auction house:
Christie's
3 December 2010, New York, Rockefeller Center
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