CHAPTER VI
THE BIOLOGICAL
FALLACY
Ofallthecurrentsthathavelappedtliefeetofarchi-
tecture,sincearchitecturefell
toits
presentruin,the
philosophyofevolution
mustbe held to
havebeen
the most powerful in its impulse, the most pene-
trating in its reach. The tide of that philosophy,
white with distant promises, is darkened, no less,
bythe wreckageof nearerthingsdestroyed. Have
thesewaters,then,effacedthecharacterswhich,upon
the walls of architecture, Romance overlaid
with
others of its own, Science disfigured, and Ethics
soughtfalsely
to
restore?
SolongasthesequenceofRenaissancestyles
con-
tinuedunbroken,
the
standardsbywhicharchitecture
was judged grew and developed with
architecture
itself. Aformative force tookpossession ofcritical
taste,
whileitcontrolledcreative
power. Thelarge
outline of tradition stood fast; but, as
within it
shapesucceeded
shape,
reason
—
withdueconservative
criesand properprotests
—
^yet followed,
understood
and sanctioned. Style dictated its own
criterion
;
taste
acceptedit. Thepastdied
becausethepresent