JoshuaZ comments on Rationality quotes: June 2010 - Less Wrong
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The section where I've added an ellipsis is a section where he discusses Newton in more detail. That entire part of the text is worth reading. Priestly wrote the book before he did his work on the composition of air. The book is, as far as I am aware, the first attempt at actual history of science. (I'm meaning to read the whole thing at some point, but the occasionally archaic grammar makes for slow reading.)
Euler is one of the few mathematicians who provide an exception to this rule. To quote Polya (Mathematics and Plausible Reasoning):
(the quoted passed in the text is apparently from Condorcet, although I don't know the initial source)
Polya is, of course, one of the few other mathematicians who break this mould. Explicitly writing books about the process of discovery.
You quoted:
But I just read the original and it is written:
Now it makes more sense to me, the 'a' makes all the difference.
Mistranscription by me. Fixed now. Thanks.
The book is available for free on google books, can you tell us the page nr. of the quotation please?
575 and 576 in the edition on Google Books.
It's a coincidence that I was thinking along these lines recently. Most science is just the result of tiny footsteps put one after the other, but when you see the final result it is impressive. Most teaching books are in fault because they only portray the end result whereas the painstaking but simple steps that lead there often in a natural way are omitted.
It is an issue that has been discussed here before. Eliezer generally uses Einstein as the example rather than Newton. See for example Einstein's Superpowers and My Childhood Role Model.