Explore Natural Philosophy

Phil • Cr. Think • Science • Hist •

The Invention of Calculus

~ < 1 of audio

The Invention of Calculus

5 Jul 1687

Invented by Newton in the 1660s (pub. 1687) and independently by Leibniz in the 1680s (pub. 1684). Both built on Galileo’s popularizing the idea of the infinitesimal.

Calculus, the mathematical study of continuous change, introduced the concepts of differentiation and integration, providing tools to model and analyze motion, growth, and the infinitesimal. Newton, working primarily in England, utilized calculus to formulate his laws of motion and gravitation, fundamentally altering our understanding of the physical universe. Simultaneously, Leibniz developed a similar set of mathematical tools, contributing a notation system that remains in use to this day. He introduced the integral sign (∫) and the differential operator (d), foundational in calculus for representing integration and infinitesimal changes, respectively. His “dy/dx” notation for derivatives elegantly describes rates of change, all of which remain central to calculus today.


That History Story, 

was first published on TST 2 years ago.
All story is part of the broader TST project.
These short entries help separate what is known, what is inferred, and what remains open. That distinction is where careful thinking begins.

The end!

Scroll to Top