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Auction archive: Lot number 97

The method of fluxions and infinite series; with its application to the geometry of curve-lines. By the Inventor Sir Isaac Newton, Kt. Late President of the Royal Society. Translated from the author’s Latin original not yet made publick. To which is ...

Estimate
US$40,000 - US$60,000
Price realised:
US$36,000
Auction archive: Lot number 97

The method of fluxions and infinite series; with its application to the geometry of curve-lines. By the Inventor Sir Isaac Newton, Kt. Late President of the Royal Society. Translated from the author’s Latin original not yet made publick. To which is ...

Estimate
US$40,000 - US$60,000
Price realised:
US$36,000
Beschreibung:

Title: The method of fluxions and infinite series; with its application to the geometry of curve-lines. By the Inventor Sir Isaac Newton, Kt. Late President of the Royal Society. Translated from the author’s Latin original not yet made publick. To which is subjoin’d, a perpetual comment upon the whole work, Consisting of Annotations, Illustrations, and Supplements, In order to make this Treatise A compleat Institution for the use of Learners. By John Colson, M.A. and F.R.S. Master of Sir Joseph Williamson’s free Mathematical-School at Rochester Author: Newton, Isaac Place: London Publisher: Printed by Henry Woodfall; and sold by John Nourse Date: 1736 Description: iv, ix-xxiv, 144, [143]-339 pp. + errata leaf with advertisement on verso. Copper-engraved plate inserted between pp. 272 and 273; woodcut diagrams throughout. (4to) 29.8x23.5 cm. (11¾x9½"), later cloth, rebacked with modern cloth. First Edition, large paper copy. Very rare large paper copy in untrimmed state of Sir Isaac Newton's Methodus Fluxionum, which was originally prepared in 1671, but remained unpublished until this English translation by John Colson. The measurements of this copy exceed those of the Norman copy and other cited copies - the only other mention of large paper copies seems to have been the Stanitz copy, sold at Sotheby's in 1984, and a copy sold at PBA Galleries in 2009 - the present copy, in rare untrimmed state, is 1.43 cm. taller and 1.2 cm. wider than the copy sold at PBA. Newton presents a method of determining the magnitudes of finite quantities by the velocities of their generating motions. At the time of its preparation, it was Newton's most complete exposition of the fundamental problem of the calculus, in which he presented his successful general method. Newton prepared this treatise just before his death and entrusted the Latin manuscript to Henry Pemberton, who never published it. In the preface, Colson writes "I thought it highly injurious to the memory and reputation of our own nation, that so curious and useful a piece should be any longer suppressed." The engraved plate demonstrates the concept of fluxions in the shooting of two birds at once; it is frequently bound as the frontispiece, but originally conceived as an illustration for pages 273-4, and so indicated on the plate. The original text was not published in Latin until 1779. In the present copy, there are several dozen neat ink corrections to the text and in the margins, reflecting the errata leaf; also, 2 marginal pencil notes, 8 lines and 12 lines, in a different hand. The errata leaf is usually found following p.140. Babson 171; Norman 1595; Wallis 232. Lot Amendments Condition: Some rubbing and edge wear to cloth; very light and faint dampstaining to preface and a few occasions in the text; a nice and very tall copy in extremely rare untrimmed state. Item number: 229378

Auction archive: Lot number 97
Auction:
Datum:
13 Sep 2012
Auction house:
PBA Galleries
1233 Sutter Street
San Francisco, CA 94109
United States
pba@pbagalleries.com
+1 (0)415 9892665
+1 (0)415 9891664
Beschreibung:

Title: The method of fluxions and infinite series; with its application to the geometry of curve-lines. By the Inventor Sir Isaac Newton, Kt. Late President of the Royal Society. Translated from the author’s Latin original not yet made publick. To which is subjoin’d, a perpetual comment upon the whole work, Consisting of Annotations, Illustrations, and Supplements, In order to make this Treatise A compleat Institution for the use of Learners. By John Colson, M.A. and F.R.S. Master of Sir Joseph Williamson’s free Mathematical-School at Rochester Author: Newton, Isaac Place: London Publisher: Printed by Henry Woodfall; and sold by John Nourse Date: 1736 Description: iv, ix-xxiv, 144, [143]-339 pp. + errata leaf with advertisement on verso. Copper-engraved plate inserted between pp. 272 and 273; woodcut diagrams throughout. (4to) 29.8x23.5 cm. (11¾x9½"), later cloth, rebacked with modern cloth. First Edition, large paper copy. Very rare large paper copy in untrimmed state of Sir Isaac Newton's Methodus Fluxionum, which was originally prepared in 1671, but remained unpublished until this English translation by John Colson. The measurements of this copy exceed those of the Norman copy and other cited copies - the only other mention of large paper copies seems to have been the Stanitz copy, sold at Sotheby's in 1984, and a copy sold at PBA Galleries in 2009 - the present copy, in rare untrimmed state, is 1.43 cm. taller and 1.2 cm. wider than the copy sold at PBA. Newton presents a method of determining the magnitudes of finite quantities by the velocities of their generating motions. At the time of its preparation, it was Newton's most complete exposition of the fundamental problem of the calculus, in which he presented his successful general method. Newton prepared this treatise just before his death and entrusted the Latin manuscript to Henry Pemberton, who never published it. In the preface, Colson writes "I thought it highly injurious to the memory and reputation of our own nation, that so curious and useful a piece should be any longer suppressed." The engraved plate demonstrates the concept of fluxions in the shooting of two birds at once; it is frequently bound as the frontispiece, but originally conceived as an illustration for pages 273-4, and so indicated on the plate. The original text was not published in Latin until 1779. In the present copy, there are several dozen neat ink corrections to the text and in the margins, reflecting the errata leaf; also, 2 marginal pencil notes, 8 lines and 12 lines, in a different hand. The errata leaf is usually found following p.140. Babson 171; Norman 1595; Wallis 232. Lot Amendments Condition: Some rubbing and edge wear to cloth; very light and faint dampstaining to preface and a few occasions in the text; a nice and very tall copy in extremely rare untrimmed state. Item number: 229378

Auction archive: Lot number 97
Auction:
Datum:
13 Sep 2012
Auction house:
PBA Galleries
1233 Sutter Street
San Francisco, CA 94109
United States
pba@pbagalleries.com
+1 (0)415 9892665
+1 (0)415 9891664
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