i84 THE ARCHITECTUREOF HUMANISM
between the conceptionandthe
technique.
In the
archaicstage, techniqueisasaruleadequateto
the
conception, andno
more: ithasnolifeofits
own
;
it is noend in itself. And the period of so-called
decadence,sofarfromshowingadeclineoftechnique
—as the organism shows a decline ofcapacity—is
often marked by a superabundance of technical
resources, whichstifletheconception. The
atrophy
is one of ideas. Our judgment, then, will have
shifteditsground: itwillhaveestimatedoneperiod
by
itstechnique,andanother
byitsconception. And,
,
beyond
this, it
often
falsifies bothby relating eadi
ofthemtotheaestheticpurposesofthe
'
climax'that
came between. In recent yearsit is
truetheinde-
pendentvalue ofarchaicarthas receivedasudden
recognition. To that extent the biological
fallacy
—
^at
any
rate
in painting
and sculpture-^has been
checked. But then a corresponding injustice is
usually done to the later phases. For the
critic's
determinationtotake
a
comprehensive
view,tousie
inclusive formulas, and to trace an evolutionary
sequencebeyonditsproperlimits,stillcauses
himtp
readthewholeseriesofhisfacts
asrelatedtoasingle
ideal. Such an attitude had compensation when
thetraditionofarchitecturewasalive,and
tastewas
limitedtoadueappreciation
ofcontemporarythings.;;
forthenappreciationwasso
far
perfect,andthepast
wasmerelyignored. Tastewas
specialisedatevery