Suppose we have two bodies, one very large (Earth), and one very small (a cannon ball). If the cannon ball is some distance away from the Earth, to find out the force produced on the cannot ball, we need to compute an integral in three dimensions of how each infinitesimal piece of Earth pulls on the ball, i.e.
$$\int_{\Omega}G \frac{m\delta(\mathbf{r})}{||\mathbf{r}||^2}dV,$$
where $\Omega$ is region of the large mass, $\delta$ is the density of the large mass, and $\mathbf{r}$ is the distance from the small mass (which we consider a point object) to each point of the large mass.
Newton showed that, provided that the large mass is a perfect sphere with uniform density, we can treat it as a point mass as well. This is not hard to do with an iterated triple integral.
Newton did not know about triple iterated integrals, and according to a physics book I have, devised a clever proof of this using a single integral only. Does someone know how Newton did this?