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Life after Gravity - Isaac Newton's London Career (Hardcover)
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Life after Gravity - Isaac Newton's London Career (Hardcover)
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The story of Isaac Newton's decades in London - as ambitious
cosmopolitan gentleman, President of London's Royal Society, Master
of the Mint, and investor in the slave trade. Isaac Newton is
celebrated throughout the world as a great scientific genius who
conceived the theory of gravity. But in his early fifties, he
abandoned his life as a reclusive university scholar to spend three
decades in London, a long period of metropolitan activity that is
often overlooked. Enmeshed in Enlightenment politics and social
affairs, Newton participated in the linked spheres of early science
and imperialist capitalism. Instead of the quiet cloisters and dark
libraries of Cambridge's all-male world, he now moved in
fashionable London society, which was characterized by patronage
relationships, sexual intrigues and ruthless ambition. Knighted by
Queen Anne, and a close ally of influential Whig politicians,
Newton occupied a powerful position as President of London's Royal
Society. He also became Master of the Mint, responsible for the
nation's money at a time of financial crisis, and himself making
and losing small fortunes on the stock market. A major investor in
the East India Company, Newton benefited from the global trading
networks that relied on selling African captives to wealthy
plantation owners in the Americas, and was responsible for
monitoring the import of African gold to be melted down for English
guineas. Patricia Fara reveals Newton's life as a cosmopolitan
gentleman by focussing on a Hogarth painting of an elite Hanoverian
drawing room. Gazing down from the mantelpiece, a bust of Newton
looms over an aristocratic audience watching their children perform
a play about European colonialism and the search for gold. Packed
with Newtonian imagery, this conversation piece depicts the
privileged, exploitative life in which this eminent Enlightenment
figure engaged, an uncomfortable side of Newton's life with which
we are much less familiar.
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