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OF THE NATURE OF THE RAYS COMPOSED OF THE IMAGES OF OBJECTS,
AND OF
THEIR INTERSECTIONS.
The directness of the rays which transmit the forms and colours of
the bodies whence they proceed does not tinge the air nor can they
affect each other by contact where they intersect. They affect only
the spot where they vanish and cease to exist, because that spot
faces and is faced by the original source of these rays, and no
other object, which surrounds that original source can be seen by
the eye where these rays are cut off and destroyed, leaving there
the spoil they have conveyed to it. And this is proved by the 4th
[
proposition], on the colour of bodies, which says: The surface of
every opaque body is affected by the colour of surrounding objects;
hence we may conclude that the spot which, by means of the rays
which convey the image, faces--and is faced by the cause of the
image, assumes the colour of that object.
On the colours of derived shadows (275. 276).
2
75.
ANY SHADOW CAST BY AN OPAQUE BODY SMALLER THAN THE LIGHT
CAUSING THE
SHADOW WILL THROW A DERIVED SHADOW WHICH IS TINGED BY THE
COLOUR OF
THE LIGHT.
203
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