The architecture of humanism; a study in the history of taste

(Ben Green) #1
THE ]|ECHA;^ICAL

FALLACY 113

architects
ofths Renaissance,
asaschool,not only


enrichedarchitejtture

witinewbeauty,butwereable

todignify
thecurrentofiordinary
lifebybendingto

itsusestheoncerigidforiAs

oftheantique. Andthis

theydid bybasingtheirartfranklyon thefactsof

perception. They

appealed, in fact, from abstract

logic
topsychology.

Asimilardefence maybeenteredfor

theRenais-

sance
practiceofcombining thearchwiththe lintel

insuchawaythattheactualstructuralvalueofthe

latter becomes nugatory, and merely valuable as

surface decoration, or for its elaborate systems of

projectionswhichcarrynothingbutthemselves. If

we
grantthat

architecturalpleasureisbasedessenti-

ally
uponoursympathywithconstructive (or,

as

we

have
agreed,

apparentlyconstructiveform),then no

kindofdecoration couldbe

moresuitabletoarchi-

tecturethanonewhich,sotosay,re-echoesthe

main

theme
with which

all building is concerned. In

Renaissance architecture, one might say, the wall

becomesarticulate,andexpressesitsidealproperties

throughitsdecoration. Awallis

based
onone

thing,

supports another, and forms a transition between

thetwo,and theclassicorders,when applieddeco-

ratively,
represented,

for the Renaissance builders,

anidealexpressionofthese


qualities,stated asgene-

ralities.


The

fallacylieswiththescientificprejudice

whichinsistsontreatingthemas


particularstatements

H
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