There is a lot to be said for figuring things out.
Which is to say, something very different than what we find
in a lot of our public discourse. Likes and copying links are cheerleading, not
informed conversation.
Figuring things out is science: You have problem, you
test and probe and try looking at it from different perspectives, and you try
to develop a solution. And then you test the solution.
Picking berries off my mulberry tree, I was frustrated that
I’d circle the tree clockwise and pick every ripe berry I saw, then turn around
and see there were lots more I’d missed.
So I went back around and picked counterclockwise, now
seeing berries that had previously been hidden by leaves.
But there were still unpicked berries. How was I missing
them? I went into the canopy and looked out, and now there were more ripe
berries that had been hidden from the outside, but visible from the inside.
To do a good harvest, I needed to also pick backwards and
inside-out. Look at things from different perspectives.
I’d figured something out.
(Image: Mulberries on teak leaves in a blue bucket.)
If you could afford it, and he could, why wouldn’t you want
to own a document half a millenium old, and by, well, Leonardo da Vinci?
(Image: A page from the da Vinci document sometimes known as Codex Leicester, sometimes Codex Hammer, which perhaps now ought to be Codex Gates. Credit: Leonardo da Vinci.)
I keep
a warm thought for Bill Gates, because on top of all the tech and charitable
work he does, he took the codex, scanned it and made it available to the world.
Leonardo Da Vinci was and is best known as a painter (“Mona Lisa,” “The
Last Supper")
But he was also one of the most figure-it-out people our little blue planet has ever produced.
But he was also one of the most figure-it-out people our little blue planet has ever produced.
In the Codex, among diverse other things, he figures out
earthshine. This is that dim image of a full moon you see when the moon is in crescent.
It is caused by the sun’s reflection off the earth—earthshine. It was proven a century later, but he figured it out and wrote about it.
NASA talks about that, crediting da Vinci with “a wild kind
of imagination…one thing Leonardo had in abundance.”
I doubt that this was his message, but he might have been
trying to say that you need to look at stuff inside out and backwards if you’re
going to understand it.
We need more of that kind of thinking.
© Jan TenBruggencate 2016
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