The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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3
8.  
The pupil of the eye, in the open air, changes in size with every  
degree of motion from the sun; and at every degree of its changes  
one and the same object seen by it will appear of a different size;  
although most frequently the relative scale of surrounding objects  
does not allow us to detect these variations in any single object we  
may look at.  
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9.  
The eye--which sees all objects reversed--retains the images for  
some time. This conclusion is proved by the results; because, the  
eye having gazed at light retains some impression of it. After  
looking (at it) there remain in the eye images of intense  
brightness, that make any less brilliant spot seem dark until the  
eye has lost the last trace of the impression of the stronger light.  
II.  
Linear Perspective.  
We see clearly from the concluding sentence of section 49, where the  
author directly addresses the painter, that he must certainly have  
intended to include the elements of mathematics in his Book on the  
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