Newton's book auctioned for record $3.7 million
Only one other original leather-bound copy of Newton's Principia has been sold at auction in the past 47 years.
New York: A bound copy of Sir Isaac Newton's seminal work describing his famed three laws of motion has sold for a whopping $3.7 million, making it the most expensive printed scientific book ever sold at an auction.
The 'Principia Mathematica' book written in 1687 was described by theoretical physicist Albert Einstein as "perhaps the greatest intellectual stride that has ever been granted to any man to make."
Auction house Christie's that handled the sale expected the goat-skin-covered book to fetch between $1 million and $1.5 million.
An unnamed bidder bought it for nearly 4 times that value at $3,719,500.
The Principia famously elucidates Newton's three laws of motion, explaining how objects move under the influences of external forces. Physics students today still use the laws, Live Science reported.
The crimson book measures about 9x7 inches and contains 252 leaves - some with woodcut diagrams - and a folding plate, according to Christie's.
Only one other original leather-bound copy of Newton's Principia has been sold at auction in the past 47 years.
That copy was presented to King James II (1633-1701) and bought at Christie's New York for about $2.5 million in December 2013.