THE
ETHICAL
FALLACY
139
neveragainbeaddressed:
'
ToallJoiners, Masons,I
Plasterers, etc., and their Noble Patrons.' A vast
j
democracywashenceforthtoexerciseitsveto
upon
taste. Ruskinwasthe firsttocaptureitsattention
for the art
ofbuilding, and
it
was natural that a
publicwhichhehadenfranchisedshouldacceptfrom
j
himitscreed. Ithadnoeffectiveexperienceeither'
inthecreationorinthepatronage
ofarchitectureby
whichthat creed mightbe corrected. Architecture
supposedly
'
Ruskinian
'—
^thoughnotalwaystothe
master'staste
—
^triumphedhenceforth inevery
com-
petition. Architectureinmoderntheorywasabook
foralltoread.
Democracy,lookingtothememorials
ofaworldithaddestroyedforsomeimage
ofitsown
desires, saw
inthe writingon the wall a
propitious
indexofitsowndestiny. The
ordersofPalladiowhich
had dignified the palacesofthe ancien
rSgintewere
easily deciphered
: Mene, Mene, Tekel,
Upharsin.
Thusthehistoryofarchitecture
wasmadeapledge
ofsocial
justice,andthepolitical
currents,strongly
running, destroyed
allunderstanding of
the Renais-
sance.
">•
The political
prejudice in taste
justifies itself by
anappealtomoral
values
;
butitdoesnot,
likethe
theological
prejudice, indulge
inoraclesfromrevela-
tion. Itis ethical,
butit is ethical
in autilitarian
sense.
It judges the
styles of architecture,
not
intrinsically, but by
their supposed