Isaac Newton Invented Calculus

The theory of infinitesimal calculus was separately developed in the later 17th century by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and Isaac Newton. Both Leibniz and Newton claimed that the other had stolen their work at the end of the 17th century, and the Leibniz-Newton calculus conflict persisted until Leibniz's death in 1716.


Calculus
was developed by Newton and German mathematician Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. The ideas of the two men, who each worked independently, helped to shape the field of calculus. This cutting-edge area of mathematics, which deals with rates of change and issues like volume inside curved lines, was developed in part because to Newton.

Newton started working on a mathematical theory that would eventually become calculus, the study of change, in 1665. For the first time, calculus provided mathematicians with a potent method of analysis to determine curve slopes and areas under curves. It now has a wide range of applications in science, engineering, and economics and can address a large range of issues that algebra alone cannot. Modern historians hold that Newton and German mathematician Gottfried Leibniz separately created calculus, despite a long-running scientific dispute about who did.

After Newton established the foundations of calculus, Leibniz took mathematics seriously and advanced it. Calculus became well known for the first time thanks to Leibniz's article from 1684.
Photo: wondriumdaily.com
Photo: wondriumdaily.com
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