Enlightenment · Europe · Science

1665

Newton's Annus Mirabilis Begins

1665

Sent home from Cambridge by the plague, a twenty-three-year-old Isaac Newton spent eighteen months at Woolsthorpe thinking. In that time he discovered the binomial theorem, invented calculus, decomposed light with prisms, and began to suspect that gravity held the moon in place. He mentioned none of it for years, hoarding discoveries that would eventually remake the foundations of physics.