Leonardo da Vinci on Public TV
Leonardo—artist, scientist, engineer, visionary—was a complex and fascinating man. The Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) will air, on KCPT-19 in Kansas City, on November 18 and 19 at 7 p.m. and repeated on Sunday, November 24 at 12 p.m., a new Ken Burns documentary on Leonardo, Italian Renaissance genius and advisor to kings and princes. Burns’s documentaries on the National Parks, baseball, the Civil War, jazz, and others have been widely popular and have set a high standard for informative television. Leonardo is Burns’s first program on a non-American subject.
Leonardo (1452-1519) helped create the modern world. Born a thousand years after the fall of Rome, he and numerous European contemporaries were humanists who believed that life wasn’t just a short stop on the road to heaven but an opportunity to make a better world by studying how nature worked and by emphasizing the importance of individuals and the power of their ability to reason.
Humanism was a sea change from the mysticism of the Middle Ages and was an optimistic view that people could produce change for the better. Progress became an expectation. Two generations after Leonardo, Shakespeare wrote, in Hamlet, “What a piece of work is a man, how noble in reason, how infinite in faculties, in form and moving how express and admirable, in action how like an angel, in apprehension how like a god.”
According to Ken Burns, “No single person can speak to our collective effort to understand the world and ourselves. But Leonardo had a unique genius for inquiry, aided by his extraordinary skill as an artist and scientist, that helps us understand the natural world that we are part of and to appreciate more fully what it means to be alive and human.”
Leonardo is best known for his sublime paintings, especially Mona Lisa (pictured) and The Last Supper, but he was an avid student of anatomy, mechanics, civil engineering, optics, geology, and more, and made important discoveries in most of these. He invented a device that measured the tensile strength of wire and envisioned flying machines, concentrated solar power, an adding machine, and a steam cannon. He created the first technical drawings with exploded views. Most of his visions couldn’t be made in his time because the necessary technologies didn’t yet exist, but they inspired others for centuries.
Mark your calendar for November 18-19 or 24 and learn about this influential man. Maybe you’ll be inspired as so many others have been.
Presidential Election
Finally, no more political ads and texts. Donald Trump got the Get Out of Jail Free Card he desperately wanted while we will get the only president who is a convicted felon and a sex offender. He’s a poor role model for America’s children and I fear America will no longer be a model democracy for other nations.
Kamala Harris ran a nearly faultless campaign in just 107 days. She provided a refreshing, positive approach to government, and, after the election, said that we only see the stars when it’s darkest and encouraged her supporters to continue working and be stars to brighten the dark.
Missing from both campaigns was a sharp focus on some of the most crucial issues facing us: climate change, the wealth gap between the rich and the rest, more rigorous schooling with well-prepared teachers, affordable public colleges and vocational schools, and gun safety including an assault weapons ban. Surely, both parties can do better.