Pemberton was employed by Newton to superintend the third edition of the ‘Principia.’ The new edition, which appeared in 1726, had a preface by Newton, in which Pemberton is characterised as ‘vir harum rerum peritissimus.’ n 1728 he published ‘A View of Sir I. Newton's Philosophy.’ It is dedicated to Robert Walpole, and is preceded by a preface containing the writer's recollections of the philosopher. A German translation of pt. i. of the ‘View,’ by Salomon Maimon, appeared at Berlin in 1793. Pemberton's book was not remunerative, and was regarded as disappointing; George Lewis Scott, however, recommended it to Edward Gibbon.
In 1724 Pemberton assisted Mead in editing William Cowper's
Myotomia Reformata. His ‘Scheme for a course of Chymistry to be performed at Gresham College’ appeared in 1731. Two courses of his lectures were published by his friend James Wilson...the first, in 1771, on chemistry; the second, in 1779, after Pemberton's death, on physiology.
In addition to these and some treatises left in manuscript, Pemberton wrote:
- ‘Dissertatio Physico-Medicinalis Inaug. de Facultate Oculi ad diversas Rerum Computatarum Distantias se accommodante,’ Leyden, 1719.
- ‘Epist. ad Amicum [viz. J. Wilson] de Rogeri Cotesii Inventis,’ 1722 (showing how Roger Cotes's theorems by ratios and logarithms may be done by circle and hyperbola).
- ‘Observations on Poetry, occasioned by Glover's “Leonidas,”’ 1738.
His
Account of the Ancient Ode prefaces Gilbert West's
Pindar, and a paper
On the Dispute about Fluxions is in the second volume of Benjamin Robins's ‘Works.’