The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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movement, running, standing, supported, sitting, leaning, kneeling,  
lying down, suspended. Carrying or being carried, thrusting,  
pulling, striking, being struck, pressing down and lifting up.  
[As to how a figure should stand with a weight in its hand [Footnote  
8
: The original text ends here.] Remember].  
3
69.  
A sitting man cannot raise himself if that part of his body which is  
front of his axis [centre of gravity] does not weigh more than that  
which is behind that axis [or centre] without using his arms.  
A man who is mounting any slope finds that he must involuntarily  
throw the most weight forward, on the higher foot, rather than  
behind--that is in front of the axis and not behind it. Hence a man  
will always, involuntarily, throw the greater weight towards the  
point whither he desires to move than in any other direction.  
The faster a man runs, the more he leans forward towards the point  
he runs to and throws more weight in front of his axis than behind.  
A man who runs down hill throws the axis onto his heels, and one who  
runs up hill throws it into the points of his feet; and a man  
running on level ground throws it first on his heels and then on the  
points of his feet.  
271  


Page
269 270 271 272 273

Quick Jump
1 306 613 919 1225