Leonardo da Vinci’s Holistic Conception of Nature and Quantum Non-Separability

Authors

  • Sara Taglialagamba University of Urbino Carlo Bo
  • Gino Tarozzi University of Urbino Carlo Bo

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.56550/d.4.2.1

Keywords:

Leonardo da Vinci; nature; holism; mechanistic reductionism; quantum mechanics; entanglement; nonlocality; nonseparability

Abstract

At variance with some recent interpretations emphasizing the relevance of Leonardo’s natural philosophy for contemporary science, the aim of this paper is neither to interpret Leonardo as a precursor of quantum mechanics nor to assimilate his conception of nature to contemporary relational interpretations of quantum theory. Rather, we argue that Leonardo’s organic and holistic perspective offers an alternative to mechanistic reductionism while still preserving the epistemological distinction between observer and observed reality. Quantum mechanics, by contrast, radicalizes the crisis of separability by undermining not only the independence of physical systems through entanglement and nonlocality, but also the classical distinction between subject and object through the unavoidable interaction involved in measurement processes. Leonardo’s relational and organic conception of nature should therefore not be confused with contemporary anti-realist or purely relational ontologies, since it remains grounded in a fundamentally realist and empiricist epistemology.

References

Bacon, F. (1620/2000). Novum Organum. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Calosi, C., Fano, V., & Tarozzi, G. (2011). Quantum ontology and extensional mereology. Foundations of Physics, 41, 1740–1755.

Capra, F. (2023). Leonardo da Vinci: lo scienziato della vita. Sansepolcro: Aboca.

Capra, F. (2008). The Science of Leonardo. New York: Anchor Books.

De Muynck, W. M., & Van Stekelenborg, J. T. P. M. (1986). Discussion of a proof given by Selleri and Tarozzi of the nonlocality of quantum mechanics. Physics Letters A, 116, 420–422.

Fano, V. (ed.) (2014). Gino Tarozzi, Philosopher of Physics: Studies in the Philosophy of Entanglement on His 60th Birthday. Roma: FrancoAngeli.

Kemp, M. (1981). Leonardo da Vinci: The Marvellous Works of Nature and Man. London: Dent.

Pedretti, C. (1995). Libro di pittura: Codice Urbinate lat. 1270 nella Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana. Critical transcription by Vecce, C. Firenze: Giunti, 2 voll.

Rovelli, C. (1996). Relational quantum mechanics. International Journal of Theoretical Physics, 35, 1637–1678.

Selleri, F., & Tarozzi, G. (1981). Quantum mechanics, reality and separability. Rivista del Nuovo Cimento, 4(2), 1–54.

Taglialagamba, S. (2026). La scientia per Leonardo, in Carannante, S. (ed.), Metafore della natura dal Rinascimento all’età moderna. Firenze: Edifir (forthcoming).

Taglialagamba, S. (2017) Leonardo e i quattro elementi. I 100 disegni più belli di Leonardo dalle collezioni di tutto il mondo. Edizione nazionale dei disegni e dei manoscritti. Presentazione di Pedretti, C. e Galluzzi P. Firenze: Giunti-Treccani.

Tarozzi, G. (1981). ‘Local realism and Bell’s theorem without the hidden variable hypothesis.’ Memorie Accademia Scienze Torino, 108, 119–124.

Downloads

Published

2026-05-22

Issue

Section

Articles