Story Highlights
• Rarely seen Isaac Newton papers go on display in Jerusalem
• Newton calculated the end of the world -- no earlier than
2060
• He also detailed the precise dimensions of the ancient
temple in Jerusalem
• Curator: The Newton papers "show a scientist guided by
religious fervor"
JERUSALEM (AP) -- Three-century-old manuscripts by
Isaac Newton calculating the exact date of the apocalypse,
detailing the precise dimensions of the ancient temple in
Jerusalem and interpreting passages of the Bible -- exhibited
this week for the first time -- lay bare the little-known
religious intensity of a man many consider history's greatest
scientist.
Newton, who died 280 years ago, is known for laying much of
the groundwork for modern physics, astronomy, math and optics.
But in a new Jerusalem exhibit, he appears as a scholar of deep
faith who also found time to write on Jewish law -- even penning
a few phrases in careful Hebrew letters -- and combing the Old
Testament's Book of Daniel for clues about the world's end.
The documents, purchased by a Jewish scholar at a Sotheby's
auction in London in 1936, have been kept in safes at Israel's
national library in Jerusalem since 1969. Available for decades
only to a small number of scholars, they have never before been
shown to the public.
In one manuscript from the early 1700s, Newton used the
cryptic Book of Daniel to calculate the date for the apocalypse,
reaching the conclusion that the world would end no earlier than
2060.
"It may end later, but I see no reason for its ending
sooner," Newton wrote. However, he added, "This I mention not to
assert when the time of the end shall be, but to put a stop to
the rash conjectures of fanciful men who are frequently
predicting the time of the end, and by doing so bring the sacred
prophesies into discredit as often as their predictions fail."
In another document, Newton interpreted biblical prophecies
to mean that the Jews would return to the Holy Land before the
world ends. The end of days will see "the ruin of the wicked
nations, the end of weeping and of all troubles, the return of
the Jews captivity and their setting up a flourishing and
everlasting Kingdom," he posited.
The exhibit also includes treatises on daily practice in the
Jewish temple in Jerusalem. In one document, Newton discussed
the exact dimensions of the temple -- its plans mirrored the
arrangement of the cosmos, he believed -- and sketched it.
Another paper contains words in Hebrew, including a sentence
taken from the Jewish prayerbook.
Yemima Ben-Menahem, one of the exhibit's curators, said the
papers show Newton's conviction that important knowledge was
hiding in ancient texts.
"He believed there was wisdom in the world that got lost. He
thought it was coded, and that by studying things like the
dimensions of the temple, he could decode it," she said.
The Newton papers, Ben-Menahem said, also complicate the idea
that science is diametrically opposed to religion. "These
documents show a scientist guided by religious fervor, by a
desire to see God's actions in the world," she said.
More prosaic documents on display show Newton keeping track
of his income and expenses while a scholar at Cambridge and
later, as master of the Royal Mint, negotiating with a group of
miners from Devon and Cornwall about the price of the tin they
supplied to Queen Anne.
The archives of Hebrew University in Jerusalem include a 1940
letter from Albert Einstein to Abraham Shalom Yahuda, the
collector who purchased the papers a year earlier.
Newton's religious writings, Einstein wrote, provide "a
variety of sketches and ongoing changes that give us a most
interesting look into the mental laboratory of this unique
thinker."
Copyright 2007 The
Associated Press.