Leonardo Da Vinci: Artist, Thinker and Man of Science, 第 2 卷 |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 61 筆
第 18 頁
They do not know that such matters as occupy me are better fitted for treatment by
experiment than by words . Now , those who have written well have learnt from
experience , to which I myself always look up as my master . ” What suffering and
...
They do not know that such matters as occupy me are better fitted for treatment by
experiment than by words . Now , those who have written well have learnt from
experience , to which I myself always look up as my master . ” What suffering and
...
第 20 頁
Castiglione would have given him a place of honour in his Cortegiano ; Ariosto
would have set him in the company of Charlemagne's paladins ; Bembo would
have written his epitaph in an eloquent mingling of pleasure and pain ! But the ...
Castiglione would have given him a place of honour in his Cortegiano ; Ariosto
would have set him in the company of Charlemagne's paladins ; Bembo would
have written his epitaph in an eloquent mingling of pleasure and pain ! But the ...
第 23 頁
Did he write love songs , or did he pen those light verses of which Florentines
were so fond ? Did he follow the example of his great rival , Bramante , whose
sonnets , composed at Il Moro's court , pay so generous a homage to the comic
muse ...
Did he write love songs , or did he pen those light verses of which Florentines
were so fond ? Did he follow the example of his great rival , Bramante , whose
sonnets , composed at Il Moro's court , pay so generous a homage to the comic
muse ...
第 48 頁
On this manuscript - falsely attributed first to Francesco di Giorgio Martini and
afterwards to Da Vinci himself — Leonardo has written a few notes . is really a
compilation from the works of L. B. Alberti ( Mancini , di un Codice . . . con alcuni ...
On this manuscript - falsely attributed first to Francesco di Giorgio Martini and
afterwards to Da Vinci himself — Leonardo has written a few notes . is really a
compilation from the works of L. B. Alberti ( Mancini , di un Codice . . . con alcuni ...
第 53 頁
The detractors of the Renaissance — and they are not wanting in these days —
affirm that the study of the classic writers and the idolatry of which they were once
the object , long paralysed the progress of science . At first sight the example of ...
The detractors of the Renaissance — and they are not wanting in these days —
affirm that the study of the classic writers and the idolatry of which they were once
the object , long paralysed the progress of science . At first sight the example of ...
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