HUMANIST
VALUES 217
seated
and
universaland
continuous,as,forexample,
the
processofbreathing.
And/thishabitofprojecting
theimageofourownfunctions
upontheoutsideworld*^
of reading the outside
world in our own terms, is
certainly ancient,common,and profound.
It/is, in
fa:ct,the natural
wayof perceivingand interpreting
what wesee\ Itis the wayof thechild in whom
perpetual pretence and
'
endless
imitation
'
are a
spontaneousmethod
ofenvisagingtheworld. It is
thewayof the savage, whobelieves in 'animism,'
andconceiveseveryobjecttobeinvestedwithpowers
likehisown.^ Itisthewayoftheprimitivepeoples,
who inthe elaborate business
ofthe dance give a
bodilyrenderingtotheirbeliefsanddesireslongbefore
thought has accurately expressed them. It is the
wayofa,superblygiftedraceliketheGreeks,whose
mythologyisonevastmonumenttojustthisinstinct.
It
is the wayof the poetic
mind
at
all times and
places,whichhumanisestheexternalworld,not
in
a
'
Thusithasoflatebeen
morefullyrealisedthatchildrenand
primitiveracesare often
capable ofveryremarkable achievement
in
expressiveart,whilethe
scientificperceptionofthe
world
for
the
most
partunderminesthe
gift. Ifthechildorthesavage
isincapable
ofappreciatinggreat
architecture,itis notbecausethey
lackthe
sesthetic
sense(fora
childthegeneralforms,for
instance,ofapiece
offurnitureareoftenchargedwithsignificance
andimpressiveness),
butbecausethescopeandcontinuityoftheir
attentionistoolimited
toorganisetheseperceptionsintoany
aestheticwhole,stillmoreto
givethem concreterealisation. None
theless, itisonthis
half-
consciousorsubconscious,yetnotquite
undiscoverableworldinwhich,
morethanourselves,theylive, that
architecture,likeallthearts,
dependsforitseffect.