The Peterborough Examiner

Experts search for rare Isaac Newton first editions

Three copies of book found in Canadian university libraries but more may be in private collection­s

- HINA ALAM

Tucked away in three university libraries across Canada are first edition copies of a book that experts say contains the building blocks of science.

Prof. Mordechai Feingold of the California Institute of Technology and Andrej Svorencik of the University of Mannheim in Germany are looking for more copies of Sir Isaac Newton’s “Mathematic­al Principles of Natural Philosophy” in private collection­s.

The two experts in September published a paper in their “attempt to locate all surviving copies” of the first edition of Newton’s book.

Many people believe that the book, published in 1687, was “so complicate­d” that no one read it, Feingold said. By tracing the ownership of first editions, the scientists want to show that not only was the book read but it was also understood.

“I mean, not necessaril­y as Newton did, but sufficient­ly to build on,” he said.

A census of the book published in 1953 showed there were 189 copies scattered around the world but a new estimate puts the number at 386.

Dalhousie, McGill and the University of Toronto each have a copy of the 510-page leather-bound book.

Karen Smith, special collection­s librarian at Dalhousie in Halifax, said the school’s copy was donated in 1934 by William Inglis Morse, who spent most of his adult life travelling, collecting and visiting libraries.

She said Morse believed books should be “handed on as a heritage of the ages.”

The copy at McGill University in Montreal was donated in 1911 by Sir William Osler, a renowned physician, as part of his 8,000-title collection.

The University of Toronto’s Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library purchased a copy from a bookseller in 1971 for less than $5,000, said science and medicine librarian Alexandra Carter. A copy in 2016 sold for $3.7 million (U.S.).

Lauren Williams, the liaison librarian for the Blacker Wood Natural History Collection at McGill, said books during Newton’s time became smaller, so they were no longer large stationary objects.

The binding can also tell a lot about the person who owned the book, Williams said. A wealthy person would use gold leaf on their bindings, while someone of modest means would get a simple binding. Newton opted for a simple binding, which also says something about his approach to books being functional and practical, she said.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A rare 1687 first edition of Sir Isaac Newton’s book “Philosophi­ae Naturalis Principia Mathematic­a”.
NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS A rare 1687 first edition of Sir Isaac Newton’s book “Philosophi­ae Naturalis Principia Mathematic­a”.

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