Thursday, July 15, 2010

Background to Newton’s life
When a tiny and frail boy was born in the obscure Lincolnshire hamlet of Woolsthorpe on Christmas
Day 1642, the attendant maids did not believe he would survive the hour, let alone eighty-four years.
As it was, Isaac Newton went on to become a Fellow of Trinity College and the Royal Society,
Cambridge’s second Lucasian Professor of Mathematics, the author of the Principia mathematica
(1687) and the Opticks (1704), a member of Parliament, Master of the Royal Mint, a knight and
President of the Royal Society. When he died in 1727, he was given a state funeral and buried in a
place of honour at Westminster Abbey. His work in physics gave us universal gravitation, a
mathematical explanation for the elliptical orbit of planets and a precise celestial mechanics that still
serves the world in the space age. His optical experiments confirmed the heterogeneous nature of
white light, and he constructed the first practical reflecting telescope. He discovered calculus and
showed more than any other thinker before him how well mathematics could explain the workings
of the universe. Hagiographic celebrations of Newton in the years and decades after his death
ensured his fame as an enduring icon of science and as having produced one of the greatest
revolutions ever in the study of nature. But the range of his intellectual endeavour was even broader
than this. What is less well known is that for more than half a century Newton was carrying out a
private revolution in theology.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Do you know who signed him self as "Jehova Sanctus Unus"???
Well one of the worlds greatest minds & Scientist, Sir Issac Newtown signed his name as Jeova Sanctus Unus this is the anagram of latinised version of his real name Jsaacus Neuutonus
this name means Jehovah or the Great One.

This blog is a tribute to The Great One or the 'One True God' and all the great minds who realised the truth