1684 - January - famous 'Coffee House' meetings between Halley, Hooke, and Christopher Wren concerning the question of the motion of the earth and the problem of the inverse square relation.
August - Edmond Halley (1656-1742) makes his famous Cambridge visit to inquire of Newton about the path of a planet moving in relation to an inverse-square. Newton later begins work on his Principia.
October - Newton begins to lecture on De motu corporum, liberprimus.
November - Newton sends his short treatise De motu to London;
December 10 - De motu is received by Royal Society; Newton writes his De composito serierum and Mathesos universalis.
Leibniz publishes his Novus methodus, his first publication calculus, which appears to have resulted from his entirely independent efforts. It resulted in an infamous priority dispute with Newton, who had earlier arrived at similar results, though he failed to put them into print.
1685 - February 23 - By this date De motu had been entered in the Register of the Royal Society.
1686 - April 28 - Newton presents his Principia, Book I to the Royal Society.
May 19 - Royal Society decided to publish Principia.
May 22 - Edmond Halley began to correspond with Newton on Principia.
June 2 - Edmond Halley instructed by Royal Society to publish Principia.
June 30 - Principia licensed by Samuel Pepys, President of Royal Society.
1687 - March 1 - Book II of Principia sent to Edmond Halley.
April 4 - Book III of Principia sent to Edmond Halley.
April 11 - Newton is appointed by Cambridge Senate as one of the representatives in the Francis affair.
April 21 - Newton appears before Ecclesiastical Commission.
July 5 - Completion of Newton - Edmond Halley Principia correspondence; the Principia appears in print.
September 28 - Newton begins lecturing on De mundi systemate.
Halley reviews the Principia of the 'incomparable author' in the Philosophical Transactions.
1684 - January - famous 'Coffee House' meetings between Halley, Hooke, and Christopher Wren concerning the question of the motion of the earth and the problem of the inverse square relation.
August - Edmond Halley (1656-1742) makes his famous Cambridge visit to inquire of Newton about the path of a planet moving in relation to an inverse-square. Newton later begins work on his Principia.
October - Newton begins to lecture on De motu corporum, liberprimus.
November - Newton sends his short treatise De motu to London;
December 10 - De motu is received by Royal Society; Newton writes his De composito serierum and Mathesos universalis.
Leibniz publishes his Novus methodus, his first publication calculus, which appears to have resulted from his entirely independent efforts. It resulted in an infamous priority dispute with Newton, who had earlier arrived at similar results, though he failed to put them into print.
1685 - February 23 - By this date De motu had been entered in the Register of the Royal Society.
1686 - April 28 - Newton presents his Principia, Book I to the Royal Society.
May 19 - Royal Society decided to publish Principia.
May 22 - Edmond Halley began to correspond with Newton on Principia.
June 2 - Edmond Halley instructed by Royal Society to publish Principia.
June 30 - Principia licensed by Samuel Pepys, President of Royal Society.
1687 - March 1 - Book II of Principia sent to Edmond Halley.
April 4 - Book III of Principia sent to Edmond Halley.
April 11 - Newton is appointed by Cambridge Senate as one of the representatives in the Francis affair.
April 21 - Newton appears before Ecclesiastical Commission.
July 5 - Completion of Newton - Edmond Halley Principia correspondence; the Principia appears in print.
September 28 - Newton begins lecturing on De mundi systemate.
Halley reviews the Principia of the 'incomparable author' in the Philosophical Transactions.
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