ABSTRACT

In order to function, architectural theory and practice must be shaped to suit current cultural, economic, and political forces. Thus, architecture embodies reductive logic that conditions the treatment of human and social processes – which raises the question of how to define objectivity for architectural mentalities that must conform to a set of immediate conditions.

This book focuses on meaning, and on the physical and mental processes that define life in built environments. The potential to draw knowledge from aesthetics, psychology, political economy, philosophy, geography, and sociology is offset by the fact that architectural logic is inevitably reductive, cultural, socio-economic, and political. However, despite the duty to conform, it is argued that the treatment of human processes, and the understanding of architectural mentalities, can benefit from interdisciplinary linkages, small freedoms, and cracks in a system of imperatives that can yield the means of greater objectivity.

This is valuable reading for students and researchers interested in architectural theory as a working reality, and in the relationships between architecture and other fields.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|31 pages

The rhetorical tradition

chapter 2|19 pages

The elemental tradition

chapter 3|36 pages

The nature of meaning

chapter 4|35 pages

Ideas and sources

chapter 5|31 pages

Architecture, idealism, and meaning

chapter 6|33 pages

An imperfect future

chapter |8 pages

Conclusions