

Newton's explanation why things corpuscular do not fly away in all directions Newton saw light as a continuous ray that moved with speed, and hisĮxpressions of this view were met with disbelief. That a blind man receives as sensations at his hand as he taps his stick while

The mechanics of light as a succession of pressures or bumps – like the bumps Of light, working on this from around 1666. Newton was also a mathematician, and he applied mathematics to his study While riding the new wave of empirical inquiry. Similar to that of Democritus of ancient Greece. Of matter, a belief that matter was made up of tiny particles – an atomic theory Newton adopted what was known as the corpuscular theory Was interested in mechanisms, and halfway through his undergraduate years heĪdopted a mechanistic view of the workings of nature, joining Hobbes, BoyleĪnd the French philosopher René Descartes against the rival Influenced by the development of mechanical devices in Europe. His way through the writings of Aristotle. Isaac Newton entered Cambridge in 1661 and in his undergraduate years had to work Boyle, with careful observationĪnd experimentation, elevated chemistry above the alchemy popular in his time.Īnd another progressive was Isaac Newton, who revolutionized how the universe

Was also Robert Boyle, another natural philosopher. Among other progressives in England was William Harvey, who lived to 1657Īnd demonstrated the function of the heart and the circulation of blood.
