Shadow Plays: Virtual Realities in an Analog World

Chapter 2, Note 27

Stuart Clark, Vanities of the Eye: Vision in Early Modern European Culture (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007), 83. Brunelleschi’s famous perspectival experiment with the Baptistery in Florence involved a mirror and a painting. In the words of Samuel Edgerton, his “demonstration permitted viewers to believe that they had penetrated the very ‘enigma’ of the mirror, to see both the virtual reflection and actual Baptistery ‘face to face’ behind the reflection, just as Saint Paul had preached” (italics mine). Samuel Y. Edgerton, The Mirror, the Window, and the Telescope. How Renaissance Linear Perspective Changed Our Vision of the Universe (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2009), 49. The Saint Paul reference is to the famous passage in Corinthians I:13–12, “For now we see through a glass darkly, but then face to face.” In the eighteenth century, the theological mystery of vision is translated into scientific, and technological, terms.

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