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Leonardo da Vinci: The Universal Genius

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Iris Noble

Leonardo da Vinci: The Universal Genius

Library Binding (Norton March 15, 1965) , 1st edition
Although it is possible to compare the talents of such geniuses as Shakespeare, Goethe, and Dante, or of various scientists, artists, and inventors, one man in history stands alone by virtue of the number and variety of his talents. It can be said with little argument that Leonardo da Vinci was gifted with more creative abilities than any other human being. Painter, sculptor, architect, mathematician, musician, astronomer, geologist, botanist, philosopher, and engineer - da Vinci was the prototype of the "Renaissance man." A brilliant pioneer in the field of science, he anticipated the invention of the airplane and the submarine, for example; the studies in his notebooks were so far ahead of his time that he had to write in code to avoid discovery and punishment for "heresy." His paintings and sketches alone rank him in the forefront of the world's great men. Fortunately, Leonardo lived in an age and a place - Renaissance Italy - where the intellectual was more highly honored than either the military man or the politician. His own nature antagonized many and brought him tragedy, but at the same time it carried him to such heights that even in his own era he was imitated, admired, and followed by most of his fellow artists. Today, we can only guess how much further and more quickly our civilization would have advanced had Leonardo's notebooks not been buried away, unread, for centuries. We can only marvel at the brain that conceived such ideas.
Pages
224
Weight
19.2 oz.
Dimensions
9.0 x 5.0 in.

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