The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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70 71 72 73 74

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circles, and fills the surrounding air with infinite images of  
itself. And is repeated, the whole every-where, and the whole in  
every smallest part. This can be proved by experiment, since if you  
shut a window that faces west and make a hole [Footnote: 6. Here the  
text breaks off.] . .  
[Footnote: Compare LIBRI, Histoire des sciences mathématiques en  
Italie. Tome III, p. 43.]  
The function of the eye as explained by the camera obscura (70. 71).  
7
0.  
If the object in front of the eye sends its image to the eye, the  
eye, on the other hand, sends its image to the object, and no  
portion whatever of the object is lost in the images it throws off,  
for any reason either in the eye or the object. Therefore we may  
rather believe it to be the nature and potency of our luminous  
atmosphere which absorbs the images of the objects existing in it,  
than the nature of the objects, to send their images through the  
air. If the object opposite to the eye were to send its image to the  
eye, the eye would have to do the same to the object, whence it  
might seem that these images were an emanation. But, if so, it would  
be necessary [to admit] that every object became rapidly smaller;  
because each object appears by its images in the surrounding  
atmosphere. That is: the whole object in the whole atmosphere, and  
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Page
70 71 72 73 74

Quick Jump
1 306 613 919 1225