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