"If Newton first invented the method of fluxions, as is pretended to be proved by his letter of the 10th of december 1672, Leibnitz equally invented it on his part, without borrowing any thing from his rival. These two great men by the strength of their genius arrived at the same discovery through different paths: one, by considering fluxions as the simple relations of quantities, which rise or vanish at the same instant; the other, by reflecting, that, in a series of quantities which increase or decrease, the difference between two consecutive terms may become infinitely small, that is to say, less than any determinable finite magnitude. This opinion, at present universally received except in England, was that of Newton himself, when he first published his Principia... At that time the truth was near it's source, and not yet altered by the passions. In vain did Newton afterward change his language, led away by the flattery of his countrymen and disciples; in vain did he pretend, that the glory of a discovery belongs entirely to the first inventor, and that second inventors ought not to be admitted to share it. ...two men, who separately make the same important discovery, have an equal claim to admiration; and... he who first makes it public, has the first claim to the public gratitude."

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Added on April 10, 2026
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