34
THE
ARCHITECTUREOF
HUMANISM
to
disown its authority, and to
be guided, if it is
guidedatall, by
instinctsofwhich
theintellectcan
give no immediate account.
It is an unconscious
attempt
todrillart into the ready-made
categories
whichwehave
foundusefulinquiteotherfields,and
toexplain theunfamiliarby
the familiar. Itisthe
application toart ofthe methods ofscience, which
sometimesarelessconcernedwiththeultimatetruth
about
itsfactsthan with bringingthem within the
range of a given intellectual formula. But it is
unscientific to persist in the application when itis
clearthattheformula
doesnotfit.
f'Wehavedealtinthischapterwithapointofhis-
toricalfact. Itishistoricallytruethatthedistinctive
controlin
Renaissance architecture
lay notin con-
struction or materials or politics, but, chiefly and
typically,
inthetasteforform. 1 Itfollows
that
itis
reasonable to analyse the Italian styles primarily
intermsoftaste: toask,howfardotheyfulfilthat
third
*
condition of well-building
' which WottOH
names
'
delight.'
Butitisonethingtostatehow
Renaissancearchi-
tecturearose
;
itis
quiteanothertoestimateitsvalue,*
Foritmayberejoinedthatgoodtasteinarchitecture
consists in approving what is
truthfully built—ex-
pressive
alike of the
methods and materials ofits
construction
on
theonehand,and,
on the other,
of
the
ends
it
hastoserve
; andthatifthe
taste
ofthe