The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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follows:--[11]every object as it becomes more remote loses first  
those parts which are smallest. Thus of a horse, we should lose the  
legs before the head, because the legs are thinner than the head;  
and the neck before the body for the same reason. Hence it follows  
that the last part of the horse which would be discernible by the  
eye would be the mass of the body in an oval form, or rather in a  
cylindrical form and this would lose its apparent thickness before  
its length--according to the 2nd rule given above, &c. [Footnote 23:  
Compare line 11.].  
If the eye remains stationary the perspective terminates in the  
distance in a point. But if the eye moves in a straight [horizontal]  
line the perspective terminates in a line and the reason is that  
this line is generated by the motion of the point and our sight;  
therefore it follows that as we move our sight [eye], the point  
moves, and as we move the point, the line is generated, &c.  
An illustration by experiment.  
2
24.  
Every visible body, in so far as it affects the eye, includes three  
attributes; that is to say: mass, form and colour; and the mass is  
recognisable at a greater distance from the place of its actual  
existence than either colour or form. Again, colour is discernible  
at a greater distance than form, but this law does not apply to  
178  


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176 177 178 179 180

Quick Jump
1 306 613 919 1225