Leonardo da Vinci — "Indeed, nature is full of infinite reasons that have never been in experience."
Indeed, nature is full of infinite reasons that have never been in experience.
Indeed, nature is full of infinite reasons that have never been in experience.
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"Human subtlety will never devise an invention more beautiful, more simple or more direct than does nature, because in her inventions nothing is lacking and nothing is superfluous."
"The natural desire of good men is knowledge."
"The water that you touch in a river is the last of that which has passed, and the first of that which comes; so with present time."
"Life is pretty simple: You do some stuff. Most of it doesn't work. If it doesn't work, you do something else. The thing that works, you do more of."
"Oh, how many times have I been deceived by my own opinions!"
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Reality contains countless truths and principles that exist independently of whether humans have yet observed or tested them. Knowledge doesn't require prior human experience to be real — the universe operates by rules waiting to be discovered, not invented. Understanding comes from recognizing patterns nature already embodies, rather than assuming human perception sets the boundaries of what exists or what can be known.
Da Vinci spent his life documenting nature's patterns — bird flight, water currents, human anatomy, geological formations — believing observation revealed pre-existing laws. His notebooks overflow with studies of phenomena others ignored. This reflects his core conviction that the natural world was an inexhaustible teacher, and that careful study could uncover truths no authority had yet articulated, driving his relentless empirical investigations across dozens of disciplines.
The Renaissance challenged medieval scholasticism's reliance on ancient texts as the sole authority on truth. Da Vinci worked during a period when empirical observation was only beginning to displace Aristotelian dogma. Printing presses spread new ideas rapidly, explorers were encountering unknown continents, and natural philosophers were questioning inherited knowledge — making da Vinci's insistence that nature held undiscovered truths both revolutionary and culturally resonant.
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