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Education Quote by Leonardo da Vinci

"All our knowledge has its origins in our perceptions"

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Leonardo is sneaking a manifesto into a sentence that looks almost modest. “All our knowledge” is a sweeping claim, but he anchors it in the most practical place possible: perception. For an artist-engineer who lived by looking harder than everyone else, this isn’t airy philosophy; it’s a method. The line elevates the eye (and by extension the hand) as an instrument of truth at a time when Europe was renegotiating its relationship with authority, tradition, and inherited dogma. Renaissance humanism is in the background, but so is the workshop: pigments, anatomy studies, gears, water flow. Knowledge begins where the body meets the world.

The subtext is a quiet demotion of secondhand certainty. If perception is the origin, then book learning and received wisdom become downstream products, not the source. That’s a provocative stance in an era when scholastic argumentation could outrank observation, and when “because Aristotle said so” still had weight. Leonardo’s notebooks are full of this suspicion: he tests, sketches, rechecks, and refuses to outsource reality.

It also contains a warning. Perception is powerful, but it’s not pure; it can be trained, fooled, corrected. The sentence flatters empiricism while admitting its fragility, which is why it feels modern: it anticipates both science’s reliance on observation and art’s obsession with how seeing is shaped by light, perspective, and bias. Leonardo isn’t just praising the senses. He’s insisting that the disciplined act of looking is the beginning of thinking.

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All our knowledge has its origins in our perceptions
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Leonardo da Vinci

Leonardo da Vinci (April 15, 1452 - May 2, 1519) was a Artist from Italy.

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