GENERAL SCIENCE. 



781 



Newton, (Sir) Isaac, (cont.). Thirteen Letters ... to John Covel, 

 D.D. [Edited by Dawson Turner.] 8°. Norwich, 1848. 



Correspondence of Sir Isaac Newton and Professor Cotes, 



including letters of other eminent men, now first published from 

 the originals in the library of Trinity College, Cambridge ; with 

 notes, &c. by J. Edleston. 8°. London, 1850. 



— — Tables for renewing and purchasing of the Leases of Cathedral 

 Churches, &c. See Anonym.ous : Tables. 



See also Algarotti : Philosophy of Sir I. Newton ; Des Maizeaux : 



Recueil . . . sur la Philosophic de Newton ; Domckius : Philo- 

 sophia Newtoniana ; Pemberton : View of Sir I. N.'s Philosophy ; 

 Whiston : Prselectiones, & Sir I. N.'s Mathematick Philosophy ; 

 and Varenius : Greographia generalis. 



See also Crompton : On the Portraits of Newton ; BurdiJc : 



Leibnitz and Newton ; and Anonymous : Newton's 5th Lemma. 



Life. See Brewster ; De Morgan ; Frisi ; Tumor. 



Newton, John. Institutio Mathematica, or a mathematical institution, 

 shewing the construction and use of Sines, Tangents, and Secants 

 in decimal numbers, and also of the table of Logarithms, with their 

 application. . . . 12°. London, 1654. 



Tabulas Mathematics, or Tables of naturall Sines, Tangents, 



and Secants, and the logarithms of the sines and tangents to 

 every degree and hundredth part of a degree in the quadrant ; their 

 common radius being 10,000,000. 12°. London, 1654. 



A Help to Calculation, or two Tables, the one of decimal numbers, 



and the other of their logarithmes for the ready converting of 

 sexagenary tables into decimal ... as also tables of declination, 

 right and oblique ascensions, ascensional difference and other 

 tables of the primum mobile. ... 4°. London, 1657. 



Astronomia Britannica ; exhibiting the doctrine of the sphere, 



and theory of the planets, decimally, by trigonometry, and by 

 tables. 2 pts. in 1 vol. 4°. London, 1657 [1656-57]. 



Trigonometria Britannica, or the Doctrine of Triangles, in two 



books ; the first of which sheweth the construction of the naturall 

 and artificiall sines, tangents and secants r and table of logarithms; 

 the other, the use of the canon of artificiall sines ... in the 

 resolution of all triangles. The one composed, the other translated 

 from the Latine copie written by Henry Gellibrand ; a table of 

 logarithms to 100,000 thereto annexed, with the artificial sines 

 and tangents to the hundredth part of every degree, and the three 

 first degrees to a thousand parts. Pol. London, 1658. 



Mathematical Elements, in three parts; the first being a 



discourse of practical geometry ; the second a description and 

 use of the globes ; the third the delineation of the globe upon the 

 plain of any great circle. 4°. London, 1660. 



