THE MECHANICAL FALLACY
99
towered into the sky far above
the churches, the
magnitude of whose
interiors they pretended
to
express, and buildings which, in reality,
were com-
posed ofseveralstories, were
comprehended within
asingleorder.
Itisuseless
to
minimisethe
extenttowhichsuch
practicesweretypicaloftheRenaissance.
Although
it isonlyin Italy, and in
theseventeenth century,
thatthe mostglaringexamplesaretobefound,
yet
the principleswhich thenreachedtheir
climaxwere
latent,andeven,inmanycases,visiblefromits
earliest
period. Theyareinherentinthepoint
ofviewfrom
which the Renaissance approached the question
of
aesthetics. And, onthecontinuous
planeofincreas-
ing
'
insincerity
'
whichthestyle,asawhole,presents,
itwouldbeunreasonableandarbitrarytoselect
this
pointorthatasthelimitofjustifiable
licence,andto
decry
all that came
after, while applauding
what
wentbefore. This,nonetheless,isthe
compromise
whichisfashionableamongthosecriticswhofeelthat
concessionsmustbemade, bothto
thestricturesof
the
'
Scientific
'
criticismontheonehand,andtothe
acknowledged fame ofthe
'
Golden
Age
'
of archi-
tectureonthe
other. Butsuch
aprocedureismis-
leading,andevadestherealissue. Itis,on
thecon-
trary, imperative
torecognisethat
the Renaissance
claimedandexercisedthislicencefromthefirst,and
to make the closest
examination
of the doctrines