The popular conception of the Renaissance as a culture devoted to order and perfection does not account for an important characteristic of Renaissance art: many of the period's major works, including those by da Vinci, Erasmus, Michelangelo, Ronsard, and Montaigne, appeared as works-in-progress, always liable to changes and additions. In Perpetual Motion, Michel Jeanneret argues for a sixteenth century swept up in change and fascinated by genesis and metamorphosis. Jeanneret begins by tracing the metamorphic sensibility in sixteenth-century science and culture. Theories of creation and cosmology, of biology and geology, profoundly affected the perspectives of leading thinkers and artists on the nature of matter and form. The conception of humanity (as understood by Pico de Mirandola, Erasmus, Rabelais, and others), reflections upon history, the theory and practice of language, all led to new ideas, new genres, and a new interest in the diversity of experience. Jeanneret goes on to show that the invention of the printing press did not necessarily produce more stable literary texts than those transmitted orally or as hand-printed manuscripts—authors incorporated ideas of transformation into the process of composing and revising and encouraged creative interpretations from their readers, translators, and imitators. Extending the argument to the visual arts, Jeanneret considers da Vinci's sketches and paintings, changing depictions of the world map, the mythological sculptures in the gardens of Prince Orsini in Bomarzo, and many other Renaissance works. More than fifty illustrations supplement his analysis.
Beautifully written, stunningly imagined, and wickedly funny, Dexter Palmer's The Dream of Perpetual Motion is a heartfelt meditation on the place of love in a world dominated by technology.
He would also like to thank, among others, Phoebe Larmore, Dennis Lee, Carolyn Moulton, Peter Pearson and David Young, For their continuing Faith illld CHC Oll l'2lg€l'l1€I'l[ . “. . . but what I mean is this: you.
A study of the life and work of Johann Bessler (aka Orffyreus)who claimed that he had perfected a Perpetual Motion machine in 1712.
The Perpetual Motion Machine: The Story of an Invention, originally published in German in 1910, is an indefinable blend of diary, diagrams and digression that falls somewhere between memoir and reverie: a document of what poet and ...
The perpetual motion machine was his experiment; these essays are hers.
Now, however, with the publication of The Triumphant Orffyrean Perpetual Motion Finally Explained! this situation has changed.
The collection has been a science project in its study of memory, in the calculation and plotting of the moments that make up a childhood.
Excerpt from Perpetual Motion: Comprising a History of the Efforts to Attain Self-Motive Mechanism With a Classified, Illustrated Collection and Explanation of the Devices Whereby It Has Been Sought and Why They Failed, and Comprising Also ...
cried Herr Gottfried with pleasure, thereby knocking over a wineglass with his left hand . He excused himself for his eternal taste- and tactlessness; Ibach smiled at these words . And then the solution came in the reading gallery .
A collection of poems explores the moral complexity of what it means to be human.