The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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I should reply that here we must have regard to the proportion of  
the mass of that portion of the brain which is given up to the sense  
of sight and to nothing else. Or--to return--this pupil in Man  
dilates and contracts according to the brightness or darkness of  
(surrounding) objects; and since it takes some time to dilate and  
contract, it cannot see immediately on going out of the light and  
into the shade, nor, in the same way, out of the shade into the  
light, and this very thing has already deceived me in painting an  
eye, and from that I learnt it.  
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7.  
Experiment [showing] the dilatation and contraction of the pupil,  
from the motion of the sun and other luminaries. In proportion as  
the sky is darker the stars appear of larger size, and if you were  
to light up the medium these stars would look smaller; and this  
difference arises solely from the pupil which dilates and contracts  
with the amount of light in the medium which is interposed between  
the eye and the luminous body. Let the experiment be made, by  
placing a candle above your head at the same time that you look at a  
star; then gradually lower the candle till it is on a level with the  
ray that comes from the star to the eye, and then you will see the  
star diminish so much that you will almost lose sight of it.  
[Footnote: No reference is made in the text to the letters on the  
accompanying diagram.]  
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43 44 45 46 47

Quick Jump
1 306 613 919 1225