1. Freeman Dyson, “A New Newton,” The New York Review of Books 50 (July 3, 2003): 4–6, esp. 6. See also James Gleick, Isaac Newton; and Brantley, Eocke, Wesley, and the Method of English Romanticism, 1–26, esp. 12–13.
2. Michael V DePorte, “Digressions and Madness in A Tale of a Tub and Tristram Shandy,” The Huntington Eibrary Quarterly 34 (November 1970): 41–57.
3. E. Derek Taylor, “Mary Astell’s Ironic Assault on John Locke’s Theory of Thinking Matter,” Journal of the History of Ideas 64 (2001): 505–22, esp. 505–07, 522.
4. See also Taylor , “Clarissa Harlowe, Mary Astell, and Elizabeth Carter: John Norris of Bemerton’s Female ‘Descendants,’” Eighteenth-Century Fiction 12 (October 1999): 19–38.
5. G. S. Rousseau,“John Wesley’s Primitive Physick (1747),” Harvard Library Bulletin 16 (July 1968): 242–56.