VI 



LIMITS AND FLUXIONS 



CHAPTER III 



BERKELEY'S ANALYST (1734); CONTROVERSY VVITH 

 JURIN AND WALTON 



The Analyst .... 

 Jurin's first reply to Berkeley 

 Walton's first reply to Berkeley . 

 Berkeley's reply to Jurin and Walton 

 Walton's second reply to Berkeley 

 Jurin's second reply to Berkeley . 

 Berkeley's second reply to Walton 

 The second edition of Walton's second reply 

 Remai- Ics ....... 



57 

 64 

 69 



72 



78 

 80 



85 

 87 

 89 



CHAPTER IV 



Jurin's Controversy with Robins and 

 Pemberton 



Robin s's Discourse on Fhixioiis ....... 96 



Jurin's review ofhis own letters to Berkeley .... loi 



Robins's rejoinder . . . . . . . . .106 



The debate continued ........ 109 



Pemberton enters the debate . . . . . . .129 



Debate over Robins's review of treatises by Leonhard Euler, 



Robert Smith, and James Jurin . . . . . .139 



Remar ks . . . . . . . . . . .146 



CHAPTER V 



TEXT-BOOKS IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING 



Berkeley's Attack 



John Colson, 1736 149 



James llodgson, 1736 155 



Thomas Bayes, 1736 . . 157 



John Muller, 1736 162 



Anonymous translation of Newton's Methcd oj Fluxiovs, 1737 . 164 



James Smith, 1737 165 



Thomas Simpson, 1737 ........ 169 



l')enjamin Martin, 1739, 1759 171 



An anonymous text, 1741 ........ 172 



John Rowe, 1741, 1757, 1767 • 175 



Berkeley ten years after . . . . . . . .178 



Remarks 179 



