Fascinating: "But those bodies manifest it more clearly which are not perceived to emit light; nevertheless, they are not perceived under any [light] than their own, [such as?] the species of firefly, rotting wood, marine fish, the eyes of cats..." (Clarius verò id manifestant illa corpora quæ lumen emittere non sentiuntur, sub alio tamen non cernuntur, quàm suo, quod genus cincindulæ, ligna putria, pisces marini, felium oculi)
Cats' eyes generate their own light! Checkmate Boulliau, 1637!
@greyor rotting wood is the one thats tripping me up in this list tbh
@Satsuma Yeah I can't figure it out either. Once I finish transcription and start proofing/correcting the translation maybe it'll make more sense.
Boulliau was a weird fuckin' guy but his Latin is wonderfully Ciceronian in many ways, and he was quite brilliant.
@greyor well let us know if you figure it out! I’m definitely curious now
@Satsuma but yeah I have been working with this prof on and off since 2010 on various projects. And I definitely have gotten to know Boulliau's style, worked on hundreds of pages of his work!
@Satsuma shit so sorry to infodump on you 😬
@greyor no it’s fine! Thanks for the link, I’ll check it out
@Satsuma oh sorry. So the prof I am working with studies history of science. Ismaël Boulliau (Latin: Ismael Bullialdus) (1605-1694) was a French philosopher, mathematician, and general polymath. This prof has spent much of his career studying Boulliau and his more famous friends like Kepler, Descartes, and others... another luminary was Pierre Gassendi (Petrus Gassendus) of Digne in Provence. They had a cool correspondence network called the Republic of Letters (respublica literarum).