During the second half of the seventeenth century, the outstanding problem in astronomy was to understand the physical basis for Kepler’s laws describing the observed orbital motion of a planet around the Sun. Robert Hooke (1635–1703) proposed in the middle 1660s that a planet’s motion is determined by compounding its tangential velocity with its radial velocity as impressed by the gravitational attraction of the Sun, and he described his physical concept to Isaac Newton (1642–1726) in correspondence in 1679. Newton denied having heard of Hooke’s novel concept of orbital motion,but shortly after their correspondence he implemented it by a geometric construction from which he deduced the physical origin of Kepler’s area law, which later beca...