The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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evident that they were a refutation of the errors of his  
contemporaries, they contain various explanations of facts which  
modern science need not modify in any essential point, and  
discoveries which history has hitherto assigned to a very much later  
date.  
The ingenious theory by which he tries to explain the nature of  
what is known as earth shine, the reflection of the sun's rays by  
the earth towards the moon, saying that it is a peculiar refraction,  
originating in the innumerable curved surfaces of the waves of the  
sea may be regarded as absurd; but it must not be forgotten that he  
had no means of detecting the fundamental error on which he based  
it, namely: the assumption that the moon was at a relatively short  
distance from the earth. So long as the motion of the earth round  
the sun remained unknown, it was of course impossible to form any  
estimate of the moon's distance from the earth by a calculation of  
its parallax.  
Before the discovery of the telescope accurate astronomical  
observations were only possible to a very limited extent. It would  
appear however from certain passages in the notes here printed for  
the first time, that Leonardo was in a position to study the spots  
in the moon more closely than he could have done with the unaided  
eye. So far as can be gathered from the mysterious language in which  
the description of his instrument is wrapped, he made use of  
magnifying glasses; these do not however seem to have been  
702  


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700 701 702 703 704

Quick Jump
1 306 613 919 1225