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w关键词:Newton/牛顿,motion/运动,law/定律 |
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w目录:Somebody/人物 |
w话题:科技,执着 |
w类型:记叙文 |
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w难度级别:中级 |
w词汇要求:1000 |
w文章词数:400 |
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To myself I seem
to have been only like a boy,
playing on the seashore. |
The
life of Isaac Newton (I)
牛顿小传(上)
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作者:Unknown |
来源:www.englishfree.com.cn |
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日期:2008-4-6 |
责编:Emma |

Most of you, no doubt, know
the story of Newton and the falling apple and how it led to his
discovery of the law of gravity. But how much do you know beyond
that? Do you know what kind of man this great scientist was? Or
where he stands in the history of science? If you don't, or even
if you do, read the following lesson.
Isaac Newton was born on
Christmas Day, 1642. He grew up in the English countryside. From
the very first Newton was very much interested in the mysteries
of nature. One of the most difficult scientific problems of
Newton's day was about the question of motion. Why did objects
move? Scientists could see that stones rolled down hills, that
wind blew leaves along the ground, and heavy objects fell to the
earth when dropped.
After Copernicus, they began to
admit that the earth itself moved. "Were there laws that govern
these various kinds of motion?" they asked themselves. The
Greeks had believed there were different rules for motion on
earth and in space, and that there were unnatural movements on
the surface of the earth.
Galileo was the first person to
challenge this Greek view of motion. This Italian scientist was
a follower of Copernicus. It didn't make much sense to Galileo
to have different rules for motion on earth and in space. He
made two important discoveries. First, he showed that motion was
not unnatural. On the contrary, an object once in motion would
tend to continue in motion. Second, Galileo worked out a
mathematical formula for the motion of all objects that fell to
the earth.
Galileo, however, did not explain
how all motion in the universe worked. Much work had been done
since Copernicus to observe and record the movements in the
solar system. It remained now for some great mathematical mind
to pull this work all together and put it into universal laws.
At the age of twenty-three Isaac
Newton moved from Cambridge to his country home. There his
thoughts turned to the problems of motion. As Newton himself
later told the story, he was sitting in the garden one evening,
thinking, when he noticed a falling apple. The apple set him to
wondering about the movement of falling things.
It occurred to him
that the force which caused fruit to fall from trees worked
quite as well at greater distances from the center of the earth
-- on top of buildings or even on top of mountains. Perhaps,
thought Newton, this same force reached out much farther still,
even to the moon. Was it this force which kept the moon going
around the earth? And if so, could not the same force explain
the movements of the planets around the sun? Newton began to
search for a mathematical expression of his idea.
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