"While Leibnitz was in possession of all these treasures, Newton had yet published nothing, from which the world could learn, that he on his part had arrived at similar results. But toward the end of the year 1686, his Philosophiæ naturalis Principia mathematica issued from the press: a vast and profound work ...the key of the most difficult problems resolved in it is the method of fluxions, or analysis of infinites, but exhibited in a form which disguised it, and rendered the author difficult to follow. Accordingly at first it had not all the success it deserved: it was charged with obscurity, with demonstrations derived from sources too remote, and an affected use of the synthetic method of the ancients, while analysis would much better have made known the spirit and progress of the invention. ...mathematicians did Newton the justice to acknowledge, that, at the period when his book was published, he was master of the method of fluxions to a high degree, at least with respect to that part which concerns the quadratures of curves."
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History of calculus
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