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    Israeli library uploads Newton's theological texts

    JERUSALEM (AP) — He's considered to be one of the greatest scientists of all time. But Sir Isaac Newton was also an influential theologian who applied a scientific approach to the study of scripture, Hebrew and Jewish mysticism.

    Now Israel's national library, an unlikely owner of a vast trove of Newton's writings, has digitized his theological collection — some 7,500 pages in Newton's own handwriting — and put it online. Among the yellowed texts are Newton's famous prediction of the apocalypse in 2060.

    Newton revolutionized physics, mathematics and astronomy in the 17th and 18th century, laying the foundations for most of classical mechanics — with the principal of universal gravitation and the three laws of motion bearing his name.

    However, the curator of Israel's national library's humanities collection said Newton was also a devout Christian who dealt far more in theology than he did in physics and believed that scripture provided a "code" to the natural world.

    "Today, we tend to make a distinction between science and faith, but to Newton it was all part of the same world," said Milka Levy-Rubin. "He believed that careful study of holy texts was a type of science, that if analyzed correctly could predict what was to come."

    So he learned how to read Hebrew, scrolled through the Bible and delved into the study of Jewish philosophy, the mysticism of Kabbalah and the Talmud — a compendium of Jewish oral law and stories about 1,500 years old.

    For instance, Newton based his calculation on the end of days on information gleaned from the Book of Daniel, which projected the apocalypse 1,260 years later. Newton figured that this count began from the crowning of Charlemagne as Roman emperor in the year 800.

    The papers cover topics such as interpretations of the Bible, theology, the history of ancient cultures, the Tabernacle and the Jewish Temple.

    The collection also contains maps that Newton sketched to assist him in his calculations and his attempts to reveal the secret knowledge he believed was encrypted within.

    He attempted to project what the end of days would look like, and the role Jews would play when it happened. Newton's objective curiosity in Judaism and the Holy Land contrasted with the anti-Jewish sentiment expressed by many leading Christian scholars of the era, Levy-Rubin said.

    "He took a great interest in the Jews, and we found no negative expressions toward Jews in his writing," said Levy-Rubin. "He said the Jews would ultimately return to their land."

    How his massive collection of work ended up in the Jewish state seems mystical in its own right.

    Years after Newton's death in 1727, his descendants gave his scientific manuscripts to his alma mater, the University of Cambridge.

    But the university rejected his nonscientific papers, so the family auctioned them off at Sotheby's in London in 1936. As chance would have it, London's other main auction house — Christie's — was selling a collection of Impressionist art the same day that attracted far more attention.

    Only two serious bidders arrived for the Newton collection that day. The first was renowned British economist John Maynard Keynes, who bought Newton's alchemy manuscripts. The second was Abraham Shalom Yahuda — a Jewish Oriental Studies scholar — who got Newton's theological writings.

    Yahuda's collection was bequeathed to the National Library of Israel in 1969, years after his death. In 2007, the library exhibited the papers for the first time and now they are available for all to see online.

    The collection contains pages after pages of Newton's flowing cursive handwriting on fraying parchment in 18th-century English, with words like "similitudes," ''prophetique" and "Whence."

    Two print versions in modern typeface are also available for easier reading: A "diplomatic" one that includes changes and corrections Newton made in the original manuscript, and a "clean" version that incorporates the corrections.

    All of the papers are linked to the Newton Project, which is hosted by the University of Sussex and includes other collections of Newton's writings.

    The Israeli library says the manuscripts help illuminate Newton's science and well as his persona.

    "As far as Newton was concerned, his approach was that history was as much a science as physics. His world view was that his 'lab' for understanding history was the holy books," said Levy-Rubin. "His faith was no less important to him than his science."

    ____

    On the Web: http://web.nli.org.il/sites/NLI/English/collections/Humanities/Pages/newton.aspx

     

    63 comments

    • award-winning cold plate ...  •  Toronto, Canada  •  3 mths ago
      2060..good news for me...I'll be 104..or more likely dead!
      • Michael 3 mths ago
        Actually, Newton misfigured the date-- it's this December 21st. Sort of like all the preachers that cry wolf and tell their followers "The end is coming", only it doesn't end, but then, they just revise the date a bit. LOL.
      • Ali 3 mths ago
        Wow, you're old.
      • award-winning cold plate ... 3 mths ago
        Ali..I suggest you brush up your math skills...I'll be 104 in 2060...48 years from now...
    • Banana Kiwi  •  3 mths ago
      Good job :)
    • pitcairnis  •  3 mths ago
      Einstein considered Newton, Michael Faraday, and James Clerk Maxwell to be the three most important scientists. What did the three have in common? They were devout religious believers. So much for any supposed hostility between religion and science.
      • Dale 3 mths ago
        Stem Cells - Galileo - Condoms - In Vitro Fertilization - Immunization
        Other examples anyone?
      • Ēqualizer 3 mths ago
        How about creationism vs evolution?
      • the dude 3 mths ago
        Biological evolution.
    • Patrick F  •  Cranbury, New Jersey  •  3 mths ago
      It must have been nice in the past when scientists were more tolerant of religion, the religious and faith in general. Today, if you say anything positive about religion and express interest in science, you're immediately discredited and marginalized.

      There's no reason for the two to be at war, science and religion. One deals with observations and findings, the other is based on faith.
      • CB 3 mths ago
        you need to get out more Patrick, wars and persecution over religion are as old as dirt.
      • Bobby 3 mths ago
        Wars claimed to be over religion, check the historical context, all over resources, same as today.
      • Ron G 3 mths ago
        Isn't basing things on faith the exact opposite of basing things on observation and findings? The problem is you use the word "religion" but define it based upon the Christian defintion of religion. Yes, religion (a belief in God and his requirements of us) and science are not mutually distinct. However, science and Christianity are mutually distinct. If science makes a discovery based upon observation and findings (such as the earth going around the sun) but the Christian preacher interprets the Bible to say otherwise, then the Christian believes what his preacher says and ignores the science.
    • Stormy  •  Nanaimo, Canada  •  3 mths ago
      Newton's estate sought to bury and minimize his religious interests and efforts because they felt they discredited his work, and negatively affected his image. But the simple fact is that they are not relevant; he was, like many geniuses, exactly as insane as he was intelligent, and that insanity does not diminish his works in the least, but may put his words into better context.

      He dedicated his life to one pursuit; to be nearer to god. He used math and alchemy to try and achieve this, and while alchemy, unsurprisingly, yielded no fruit, his work with math did, but they were not the fruits he sought.

      He never found the philosopher stone, nor did he find babylon, and even though his quest for 'truth' was limited by his expectation of already 'knowing' what that 'truth' would be, he did take steps down the path of truth, down the path of reason, and so he did help to map a little of that path in his time.

      But to use him as an argument in favor of religion, or anyone else, is an appeal to authority, a defined logical fallacy. As are all other arguments presented in favor of faith.
    • CB  •  3 mths ago
      "today, we tend to make a distinction about faith and science". very true, and there are a lot of people that feel the need to encourage themselves by putting down the beliefs of others. the people that have these needs must live a very shallow existence.
      • Ghosthy 3 mths ago
        I do just that, and no I don't have a shallow existence, I believe life is like an ice cream
        it ends wehter you enjoy it or not....so why bother living my life according to the rules of a book writen by sheep herding writters...if you want good morality the bible is definately not the right source or have you not read it?
      • CB 3 mths ago
        yep, you prove my point well, thanks for sticking your neck out
    • JOHN  •  3 mths ago
      Guess i'll never know if he got doomsday right
    • jsf  •  3 mths ago
      In Newton's day, and for some time thereafter, there was also no division between "philosophy" and "science."
    • htrfgdjytd  •  Lombard, Illinois  •  3 mths ago
      Sir Isac Newton was not wrong
      The literature he used may be
      • YIKES! 3 mths ago
        garbage in
        garbage out
    • Chris C  •  3 mths ago
      By what standard was Newton an "influential" theologian? I think he was rather largely ignored. The Oxbridge universities have religious foundations: if this material was at all influential they would have snapped it up to start with.
    • Kyle  •  3 mths ago
      Huh, I didn't know Newton made a prediction about the apocalypse.
    • i always win  •  3 mths ago
      "The first sip from the cup of natural science makes one an atheist, but at thebottom of the cup, God awaits."
      - Werner Heisenberg, nuclear physicist
    • Dustin  •  3 mths ago
      Brenda Alert
    • FSM  •  Charlotte, North Carolina  •  3 mths ago
      Bad data returns bad results.
    • Mogg  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 mths ago
      AN ASIDE ON BRENDA
      For those of you who have pondered the comments of Brenda have no fear. These are prototype musing in the proposed vernacular of the Occupy movement.
    • Ciberpuppi  •  3 mths ago
      Newton may have been the smartest person to have ever walked the Earth. Of course, even he wasn't perfect and for a time, honestly believed he would be able to transform lead into gold.

      C-Pup
    • Dustin  •  3 mths ago
      Brenda Alert
    • Bobby  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  3 mths ago
      No need to worry about the world ending this year, Newton says 2060. Go on about your business for a few more years.
    • Mogg  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 mths ago
      SENSATIONAL
      To have preserved and available the works of such a keen mind is huge. Regardless of one's position on theology the opinions of this keen observer and practiced thinker offer an insight into arguments that should pique the imagination and cause pause to consider. Happy news for inquiring minds!
    • Ēqualizer  •  Beaverton, Oregon  •  3 mths ago
      Not to discredit Newton....but I'd be WAY more interested in the notes written by Nikola Tesla. It's my belief that he was probably the smartest man to have ever existed.
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