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