The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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luminous bodies.  
The above proposition is plainly shown and proved by experiment;  
because: if you see a man close to you, you discern the exact  
appearance of the mass and of the form and also of the colouring; if  
he goes to some distance you will not recognise who he is, because  
the character of the details will disappear, if he goes still  
farther you will not be able to distinguish his colouring, but he  
will appear as a dark object, and still farther he will appear as a  
very small dark rounded object. It appears rounded because distance  
so greatly diminishes the various details that nothing remains  
visible but the larger mass. And the reason is this: We know very  
well that all the images of objects reach the senses by a small  
aperture in the eye; hence, if the whole horizon a d is admitted  
through such an aperture, the object b c being but a very small  
fraction of this horizon what space can it fill in that minute image  
of so vast a hemisphere? And because luminous bodies have more power  
in darkness than any others, it is evident that, as the chamber of  
the eye is very dark, as is the nature of all colored cavities, the  
images of distant objects are confused and lost in the great light  
of the sky; and if they are visible at all, appear dark and black,  
as every small body must when seen in the diffused light of the  
atmosphere.  
[Footnote: The diagram belonging to this passage is placed between  
lines 5 and 6; it is No. 4 on Pl. VI. ]  
179  


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177 178 179 180 181

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