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

(Ben Green) #1
THE

ETHICAL FALLACY

129

primarily with art.
It was, in effect,
a Puritan


revival. The intellectual

alternative was strict:

eitheratruculentmaterialism
(withconsequencesfor


architecturealreadyanalysed)oramoralistic
ardour

moreseverethananythat
hadbeendominantsince

theseventeenth
century.

Hereweretwosinisterantagonists. The

amiable

provincesofart,
whichlayforgottenandunguarded

attheirside,soontrembledwiththeconflict. Archi-

tecture

became
a

rallying
point; forwhilethecon-

structive

basis
of

the
artexposeditobviouslytothe

scientific attack, its ecclesiastical tradition
invited

for it, no

less, a religious defence.
In this region,

wheretheairwasdensewithancientsentiment, the

morallossessufferedinthe territoryof
metaphysics

might,

evenbyashakenarmy,

bemadegood. Itwas

a Puritan revival,butwith thisdifference: the fer-

vourofPuritanismwasnowactiveinvindicating

the

value

ofart. Itinsistedthatarchitecture
wassome-

thing more than a

mechanical
problem. It gave

it

a human reference. But, unluckily,this

Puritan

attack,far

fromclearingthepathofcriticism,
didbut

encumberitwith freshidols,equallyvainiflessin-

human

than the categories of science.
Art was

remembered,but

thestandardsofart
remainedfor-

gotten.

The old Puritanism of the

seventeenth

centuryhad

weighedtheinfluenceonlife
ofartasa

whole.

Ithad

condemneditand
drivenitforthfrom

I
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