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Isaac Newton (4 January 1643 – 31 March 1727) [1] was considered an insightful and erudite theologian by his Protestant contemporaries. [2][3][4] He wrote many works that would now be classified as occult studies, and he wrote religious tracts that dealt with the literal interpretation of the Bible. [5] . He kept his heretical beliefs private.
- The Son. It is impossible to say precisely when Newton began the innovative researches that would lead to his heterodox position on the Trinity. There is no sign that he was brought up in any radical tradition, or that he had contact with any anti-Trinitarians while he was at Cambridge.
- The Father. The flipside of Newton’s view of Christ the Son was his understanding of the overwhelming supremacy of God. Indeed, his accounts of God, offered up in later editions of his Principia and Opticks, were the best known of his statements on religion in the eighteenth century.
- Politics and religious freedom. Newton’s decision not to take holy orders at the end of 1674 marked a central point in his life. If he had ever entertained thoughts of becoming a clergyman when he entered the university, these had completely dissipated.
- A Nasty Secret. It is in this context that one should consider Newton’s Nicodemism, namely the practice of dissimulating one’s real beliefs by using various tactics of silence or concealment.
Newton was an unusual Christian. At some point in his adult years, and certainly by 1690, Newton had dismantled the standard biblical proofs for the doctrine of the Trinity whilst keeping his beliefs to himself. It was not until after his death in 1727 that his views became public and they have attracted study and speculation ever since.
Jul 5, 2016 · Edited by. Rob Iliffe and. George E. Smith. Chapter. Other Volumes in The Series of Cambridge Companions. 2 Newton's concepts of force and mass, with notes on the laws of motion. 3 Instantaneous impulse and continuous force: the foundations of Newton'sPrincipia. 9 A brief introduction to the mathematical work of Isaac Newton.
- Rob Iliffe
- 2016
Newton’s interests concerned early church history, Jewish and Christian prophecy, Scriptural exegesis, and the fate of the Noachid religion that — as he saw it — spanned the globe soon after the Flood.
Three paragraphs on religion, with drafts. Author: Isaac Newton. Metadata: post-1710, in English with some Latin, c. 2,222 words, 5 pp. Source: Keynes Ms. 9, King's College, Cambridge, UK. Newton Catalogue ID: THEM00009.
in his native Britain than in France, and several of Newton’s earliest British supporters drew attention to the brief excursions into natural theology found in the Queries to the Opticks and the General Scholium to the Principia. Nevertheless, little was known of Newton’s personal religious