The value of these utterances of Leonardo cannot be found in that they impart
to us an important psychological fact, for what they maintain is obviously
false, and Leonardo must have known this as well as we do. It is not true that
people refrain from loving or hating until they have studied and became familiar
with the nature of the object to whom they wish to give these affects, on the
contrary they love impulsively and are guided by emotional motives which have
nothing to do with cognition and whose affects are weakened,oil paintings for sale, if anything, by
thought and reflection. Leonardo only could
have implied that the love practiced by people is not of the proper and
unobjectionable kind, one should so love as to hold back the affect and to
subject it to mental elaboration, and only after it has stood the test of the
intellect should free play be given to it. And we thereby understand that he
wishes to tell us that this was the case with himself and that it would be worth
the effort of everybody else to treat love and hatred as he himself does. cheap oil paintings
And it seems that in his case it was really so. His affects were controlled
and subjected to the investigation impulse, he neither loved nor hated, but
questioned himself whence does that arise, which he was to love or hate, and
what does it signify, and thus he was at first forced to appear indifferent to
good and evil, to beauty and ugliness. During this work of investigation love
and hatred threw off their designs and uniformly changed into intellectual
interest. As a matter of fact Leonardo was not dispassionate, he did not lack
the divine spark which is the mediate or immediate motive power—il primo
motore—of all human activity. He only transmuted his passion into
inquisitiveness. He then applied himself to
study with that persistence, steadiness,abstract oil paintings for sale, and profundity which comes from
passion, and on the height of the psychic work, after the cognition was won, he
allowed the long checked affect to break loose and to flow off freely like a
branch of a stream, after it has accomplished its work. At the height of his
cognition when he could examine a big part of the whole he was seized with a
feeling of pathos, and in ecstatic words he praised the grandeur of that part of
creation which he studied, or—in religious cloak—the greatness of the creator.
Solmi has correctly divined this process of transformation in Leonardo.
According to the quotation of such a passage, in which Leonardo celebrated the
higher impulse of nature ("O mirabile necessita ... ") he said: "Tale
trasfigurazione della scienza della natura in emozione, quasi direi, religiosa,
è uno dei tratti caratteristici de manoscritti vinciani, e si trova cento e
cento volte espressa...." oil paintings for sale online
Leonardo was called the Italian Faust on account of his insatiable and
indefatigable desire for investigation. But even if we disregard the fact that
it is the possible retransformation of the desire for investigation into the
joys of life which is presupposed in the Faust tragedy, one might venture to
remark that Leonardo's system recalls Spinoza's mode of thinking.
No comments:
Post a Comment