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Volume  Volume2\Astronomy

Entry#  879. II. Sun - The question of the true and of the apparent size of the sun (879-884).


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II.


THE SUN.


The question of the true and of the apparent size of the sun

(879-884).



IN PRAISE OF THE SUN.


If you look at the stars, cutting off the rays (as may be done by

looking through a very small hole made with the extreme point of a

very fine needle, placed so as almost to touch the eye), you will

see those stars so minute that it would seem as though nothing could

be smaller; it is in fact their great distance which is the reason

of their diminution, for many of them are very many times larger

than the star which is the earth with water. Now reflect what this

our star must look like at such a distance, and then consider how

many stars might be added--both in longitude and latitude--between

those stars which are scattered over the darkened sky. But I cannot

forbear to condemn many of the ancients, who said that the sun was

no larger than it appears; among these was Epicurus, and I believe

that he founded his reason on the effects of a light placed in our

atmosphere equidistant from the centre of the earth. Any one looking

at it never sees it diminished in size at whatever distance; and the

rea-


Footnote 879-882: What Leonardo says of Epicurus-- who according to

LEWIS, _The Astronomy of the ancients_, and MADLER, _Geschichte der

Himmelskunde_, did not devote much attention to the study of

celestial phenomena--, he probably derived from Book X of Diogenes

Laertius, whose _Vitae Philosophorum_ was not printed in Greek till

1533, but the Latin translation appeared in 1475.  


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