
doi: 10.2307/3612767
Newton was the greatest mathematician of the seventeenth century. Today, almost three centuries afterwards, we are just beginning to realize the full extent and variety of his achievement. Much of his mathematical work has never been published (though it ranges far through the fields of projective geometry and general point-correspondences to number theory and an exhaustive treatment of interpolation by finite differences) and is now, with few exceptions, to be found only in little known manuscripts in the Cambridge University Library. But Newton is remembered above all, and following his own wish, for his creation of the fluxional calculus and the theory of infinite series, two strands of mathematical technique which he bound inseparably together in his “analytick” method.
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