ChatterBank0 min ago
Easy Newton ?
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Students of science and maths now learn in a few years that which it took many generations of clever people to discover. Newton's Principia is said to be "beautiful maths". What level of maths would a student be at now to understand or do the maths which Newton did in the C17 ?
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No best answer has yet been selected by FredPuli43. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.This brings back bad memories of attempting A-level physics over 30yrs ago , we got the gravitation formula to apply , but the mathematics required to derive that formula from scratch is beyond A- level , I have no idea how they teach it nowadays , maybe Factor30 or someone else could shed some light on it .
Newton kind of invented calculus but he kept it secret - when Liebenitz also came to the same discovery Newton flew into a rage and accused him of stealing it.
He also had lots of other petty hatreds
Think Sheldon Cooper with power a vicious streak a mile wide!
A level Maths is pretty much Newton level I'd say although perhaps there is less emphasis on geometry and more on some things like Complex numbers which were not "proper maths" in Newton's day - indeed he dismissed the notion!
Ah even Newton failed to see that one!
He also had lots of other petty hatreds
Think Sheldon Cooper with power a vicious streak a mile wide!
A level Maths is pretty much Newton level I'd say although perhaps there is less emphasis on geometry and more on some things like Complex numbers which were not "proper maths" in Newton's day - indeed he dismissed the notion!
Ah even Newton failed to see that one!
I Have A level maths and went up to university aged 26, and there any possible comparison with Isaac Newton ends, the mathematics he took would easily exclude me and it is my view that my A level maths were far more difficult than now taken (many disagree). I managed without a degree for a number of years in a responsible situation which I would not do today and remember Newton was at Trinity when he possibly met James Gregory who may have been a mathematical genius.
I don't see any reference to Gregory at Cambridge Tony
http:// en.wiki pedia.o rg/wiki /James_ Gregory _%28mat hematic ian%29
I think the biggest handicap is the language, the nomenclature and the symbolism.
What techniques of Newton's mathematics do you see as outside of today's A level curriculum?
Complex numbers, calculus, infinite series, logarithms all of these are solidly in the A-level syllabus today
You might well say that A level maths is firmly rooted in the 17th and 18th century.
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I think the biggest handicap is the language, the nomenclature and the symbolism.
What techniques of Newton's mathematics do you see as outside of today's A level curriculum?
Complex numbers, calculus, infinite series, logarithms all of these are solidly in the A-level syllabus today
You might well say that A level maths is firmly rooted in the 17th and 18th century.