The River
Tulips
Only the wind
Artist / Painter
Fechner on a Summer day
Museum of Art
Talking through the hat
In the cool of the night
Avocado 88 ¢ a piece
Summer survival
Go....find a nice tree....!
Keeping things whole
Raptor
Plants
POSTES FRANCAISES NAVARRE
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The Park
Grass
Untruths of "Emotional reasoning"
Five years of Friends of Friends
A Totem in the forest
Silence @ dusk
Point Cabrillo Light House
Cannot be a "like"
Desert as an art
Facades
The little green world
Colours ~ as Goethe writes about about them
Gerbera Daisies
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Edge of the Universe


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The All that is, wherever its paths may lead, is boundless. . . . There can be no end to anything without something beyond to mark that end. . . . Nor does it matter at which point one may stand: whatever position a man takes up, he finds that All still endless alike in all directions
Closer to Bruno’s time, the neo-Platonist philosopher Nicholas of Cusa (1401-1464) also discussed the possibility and significance of an infinite cosmos. Then came Copernicus ‘De revolutionibus,’ published upon his death in 1543, which placed the sun at the center of the cosmos and the Earth in orbit around it. But Copernicus still maintained that the universe was finite, and that the celestial spheres circled around the solar system; in that sense he was less revolutionary than is commonly believed.
Bruno gathered these insights from Epicurus, Cusa, and Copernicus and pieced together a strikingly modern picture of the cosmos. His universe was an infinite space composed of infinitely many solar systems like our own. He was one of the first to use modern terminology, reserving ‘world’ for the Earth and other planets and using ‘universe’ to mean the whole infinite cosmos. Bruno saw neither the Earth nor the sun as the center of the universe; like Lucretius, he realized that, in an infinite cosmos, every plae would appear as the center. Bruno said: “The Earth no more than any other world is at the center . . . The Earth is not in the center of the universe, it is central only to our own surrounding space.” ~ Page 87
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