The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


google search for The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete

Return to Master Book Index.

Page
653 654 655 656 657

Quick Jump
1 306 613 919 1225

are printed in Section XXII. Here and there in the manuscripts  
mention is made of an anonymous "adversary" (avversario) whose  
views are opposed and refuted by Leonardo, but there is no ground  
for supposing that Marc Antonio della Torre should have been this  
"adversary".  
Only a very small selection from the mass of anatomical drawings  
left by Leonardo have been published here in facsimile, but to form  
any adequate idea of their scientific merit they should be compared  
with the coarse and inadequate figures given in the published books  
of the early part of the XVI. century.  
William Hunter, the great surgeon--a competent judge--who had an  
opportunity in the time of George III. of seeing the originals in  
the King's Library, has thus recorded his opinion: "I expected to  
see little more than such designs in Anatomy as might be useful to a  
painter in his own profession. But I saw, and indeed with  
astonishment, that Leonardo had been a general and deep student.  
When I consider what pains he has taken upon every part of the body,  
the superiority of his universal genius, his particular excellence  
in mechanics and hydraulics, and the attention with which such a man  
would examine and see objects which he has to draw, I am fully  
persuaded that Leonardo was the best Anatomist, at that time, in the  
world ... Leonardo was certainly the first man, we know of, who  
introduced the practice of making anatomical drawings" (Two  
introductory letters. London 1784, pages 37 and 39).  
655  


Page
653 654 655 656 657

Quick Jump
1 306 613 919 1225