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11 answers

His primary occupation was as a professor of mathematics at Cambridge.

2006-09-13 02:44:48 · answer #1 · answered by DavidK93 7 · 0 0

Sir Isaac Newton Jobs

2016-12-12 09:09:45 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Proffesor, writer, Farmer, wanted to become a minister, cook

Isaac was taken out of school to run the family farm to support his mother and her three younger children

Isaac then went to Trinity College at Cambridge University with the intention of becoming a Church of England minister. Again, life was not easy for him. As he was unable to afford the tuition fees, he worked many hours each day serving meals and doing other jobs for the professors in order to pay his way

By 1667, Newton was made a fellow at Trinity, and soon thereafter, a professor of mathematics, a post which he held to at least 1696.

It was likely this competition which drove Newton to write his Principia, it is said, within a period of eighteen months

2006-09-13 03:01:15 · answer #3 · answered by dipydoda 3 · 0 0

After he stopped being a maths professor at Cambridge, he was first the Warden, then the Master, of Britain's Royal Mint. That's further down the web page that you've been pointed to already.

It is nonsense that he did odd jobs at the college to pay for his tuition.

2006-09-13 02:57:26 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Trinity College at Cambridge University with the intention of becoming a Church of England minister. Again, life was not easy for him. As he was unable to afford the tuition fees, he worked many hours each day serving meals and doing other jobs for the professors in order to pay his way

2006-09-13 02:45:15 · answer #5 · answered by daanzig 4 · 0 1

1. Formulation of Newton's Three Laws of motion.

2. Discovery of Gravity or Gravitational Force.

- This will be of help to you for your test.

2006-09-13 02:51:30 · answer #6 · answered by James 4 · 0 0

Why is it that you, a science teacher, do not know the answer to this question?

The reason is simple:as a kid you did'nt care less, you wanted to know Newton's science... but not his personal life(history). Why do you bore your kids with irrelevencies that you were lucky enough to not suffer?

Find an interesting extension: design an ideal car showing how you would minimise reistance and how this would maximise top speed. Not only is this more interesting, it'll engage those kids that enjoy art.

2006-09-13 05:17:13 · answer #7 · answered by theBoyLakin 3 · 0 2

Why didn't you just google Newton's name, rather than waste time asking around here? What if we are wrong?

2006-09-13 03:02:58 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

He was also member of the parlament.

2006-09-13 03:02:03 · answer #9 · answered by helene_thygesen 4 · 0 0

read your science book, thank you (your science teacher)

2006-09-13 02:44:36 · answer #10 · answered by elizabeth_davis28 6 · 0 1

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