TY - JOUR
T1 - Newton's Telescope in Print: the Role of Images in the Reception of Newton's Instrument
AU - Dupré, Sven
PY - 2008
Y1 - 2008
N2 - While Newton tried to make his telescope into a proof of the supremacy of his
theory of colours over older theories, his instrument was welcomed as a way to
shorten telescopes, not as a way to solve the problem of chromatic aberration.
This paper argues that the image published together with the report on Newton’s
telescope in Philosophical Transactions (1672) encouraged this reception.
The differences between this visualization and other images of Newton’s
telescope, especially that published in Opticks (1704), are discussed. This
paper shows that the image in Opticks adopted characteristics of a Cartesian
program of visualization of machines and instruments which complemented
a rhetoric which attributed primacy to theory over practice. The differences
between the images in Philosophical Transactions and Opticks
are also considered within the broader institutional context of Newton’s attitude
towards the Royal Society.
AB - While Newton tried to make his telescope into a proof of the supremacy of his
theory of colours over older theories, his instrument was welcomed as a way to
shorten telescopes, not as a way to solve the problem of chromatic aberration.
This paper argues that the image published together with the report on Newton’s
telescope in Philosophical Transactions (1672) encouraged this reception.
The differences between this visualization and other images of Newton’s
telescope, especially that published in Opticks (1704), are discussed. This
paper shows that the image in Opticks adopted characteristics of a Cartesian
program of visualization of machines and instruments which complemented
a rhetoric which attributed primacy to theory over practice. The differences
between the images in Philosophical Transactions and Opticks
are also considered within the broader institutional context of Newton’s attitude
towards the Royal Society.
U2 - 10.1162/posc.2008.16.4.328
DO - 10.1162/posc.2008.16.4.328
M3 - Article
SN - 1063-6145
VL - 16
SP - 328
EP - 359
JO - Perspectives on Science
JF - Perspectives on Science
IS - 4
ER -