viii THE ARCHITECTUREOF
HUMANISM
Roman,Mediaevalor Georgianarchitects,
orit
must
be
'
original
'
and
'
spontaneous,'thatis,it
mustbeat
pains to avoid this resemblance
;
or
it must strike
somehappy compromise between
these opposites
;
and
soforthindefinitely.
Ifthese
axioms
were
frankly
untrue,
theywould
be
easytodismiss
;
iftheywerebasedonfullyreasoned
theories,theywouldbeeasy,atanyrate,todiscuss.
They are
neither.
We
have
few
'
fully reasoned
'
theories,andthese,it willbeseen, are flagrantlyat
variancewiththefactstobe
explained. Wesubsist
on
a
number
ofarchitectural habits, on scraps of
tradition, on caprices andprejudices, and
aboveall
on this mass of more
or less specious axioms,of
half-truths,
unrelated, uncriticised and
often con-
tradictory, by means
of which thereis nobuilding
so bad that
it cannot with a little
ingenuity be
justified, or so good
that it cannot plausibly
be
condemned.
Under
these circumstances,
discussion is
almost
impossible, and it is
natural that criticism
should
becomedogmatic.
Yetdogmatic
criticismisbarren,
andthehistory
ofarchitecture,
robbed
ofanystandard
ofvalue,
isbarrenalso.
It
appearstome
thatif
wedesireany
clearnessin:
this
matter,we
aredriven
froma
priori
sestheticsto
the
history
oftaste,
andfromthe
history
oftasteto
the
history
ofideas.
It is, I
believe,
from
afailure