Newsgroups: rec.arts.comics.misc From: [l s mith] at [deci.cs.umn.edu] (Lance "Squiddie" Smith) Subject: Dream and the Prodigal do history... Date: Sat, 7 Nov 1992 19:43:21 GMT Pretty grim week for comics. (You know you're in trouble when the highlight of your week is Ren and Stimpy.) Anyway, I had a chance to do some more reading into Newtonian history. Dull stuff. There are probably some swell articles on Spawn elsewhere... Just remember, when your folx bother you about reading comics, just recite this stuff. See! Comics are educational. First, "A Treatise on Optics" just refers to _Opticks_. This was published in 1704. A Latin translation was published in 1706. (Latin was the lingua franca of the scientific community.) Samuel Clarke did the translation at Newton's request. With the new edition came an additional 7 queries. (Queries were Newton's observations and often served as areas for further research. All ended with a question mark.) In the 1706 edition these were queries 17-23. They were eventually bumped to spots 25-31 of the second English edition published in 1717. There was also a third English edition published in 1721. The query we're probably most interested in is number 30. The query begins, "Are not gross bodies and light convertible into one another, and may not bodies receive much of their activity from the particles of light which enter their composition?" This is something like what we hear on page 22 of issue #44. The query continues on about ways in which bodies may change into light and light may change into bodies. I'm not sure that this query and the thoughts behind it are as significant as the Prodigal seems to think. As mentioned in an earlier post, material for _Opticks_ dates back to 1675 with additional material added in 1687. The third book, that includes the queries, was only 5 pages long and was "put together out of scatter'd Papers." There is also some connection between Newton's queries and his lectures on optics as the Lucasian Professor of Mathematics. However, I couldn't find any connection in an annotated copy of his lecture notes. So I'm afraid this doesn't do much to place the period of the events at the end of issue #44. Despair's remembrance in #41 would put the abdication at about 1695. (My impression was that it was about 30 years from 1665 and not precisely that long.) The dissection of the "oran oatan" is unlikely to be before 1698. Query 30 comes after 1704, though this may only be the first time Newton put it into print. Further, Newton is referred to as "young." (Young by Endless standards, standards of the time or our standards?) Newton was born in 1642. He started experimenting with light in 1662. When he first decomposed light is hard to say. We could place it between 1662 and 1672 when he published his first paper on it. That would give us a range of 20-30 years old. Certainly youngish. (BTW, there's one theory that states that ROYGBIV came from Newton trying to match colors to available paint pigments. Thus we're stuck with indigo.) Anyone have any other clews? OBInterestingFact: Newton's opening statement in _Opticks_ is dated April 1st. (Getting all this Elmo? I'll never be able to remember it when we get around to annotating #44.) -- Lance "RainDog" Smith | "Outrageous, alarming, courageous, charming. ([l s mith] at [cs.umn.edu]) | Oh, who would think a boy and bear Still waiting for the | could be well accepted everywhere Great Leap Forward. | It's just amazing how fair people can be."