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

(Ben Green) #1
THE ETHICAL

FALLACY

135

passing
totheirinnocent
tasksthroughthecourtsof

Hawkesmooror

ofWren,were startled
torecognise

the
Abomination ofDesolation
standing, previously

unnoticed, inthe
place whereit ought

not. Anda

criticism
which would be willing


^were they pro-

pitious


^to prove a point
of theory by citing the

measurements

ofthe Ark, must nowseem

obsolete

enough.
Butifthetheological
argumenthasceased

to be effective, its
interest for the study of taste

remains immense.

And the fact that,

a hundred

years after Voltaire, one of the

foremost men of

lettersin
Europeshouldhavelookedforarchitectural

guidancein the BookofLamentationsis
onewhich

maywellcontinuetodelightthe

curiosityofanthro-

pologists when the problems ofaesthetichave been

rejectedasunfruitful,orabandoned
assolved.

II

More persuasive than

the theological prejudice,

andmorepermanent,isthepolitical. If,aswehave

said, the romantic fallacy reduced taste to amere

echoofcontemporaryidealism,ifitencouragedmen

tolookinartalwaysforareflectionoftheirexisting

dreams, what must be the verdict on Renaissance

architectureofan age whoseidealism was political

andwhosepoliticalidealwasdemocracy? Forhere

wasanarchitecturerootedinaristocracy,dependent

on the veryorganisation against which society


was
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