2i8 THE
ARCHITECTURE OF
HUMANISM
seriesofartificial
ponceits,butsimply
soperceiving
it.
Toperceiveand
interprettheworld
scientifically,
asit actually
is,issllater, a
less
'
natural,' a
more
sophisticated
process,
and
one from
which we still
relapse even when we
say the sun
is rising. The
scientific
perception oftheworld
isforced uponus
;
thehumanist
perceptionofitis
oursbyright. The
scientific method
is intellectually and
practically
useful,
but the naive, the
anthropomorphic way
which
humanises the world and
interprets it by
analogywith our own
bodies andour own wills,
is
stilltheaesthetic
way;
itisthe
basisofpoetry,and
it
is
thefoundation
ofarchitecture.
A similarconfusion between whatis
conscious
in
architectuml pleasure, and what
is
merely
implied,
seemsto
underliethe
objectionthatourtheorylays
toogreat
a
stressonphysicalstates. Our
pleasure
in
architecture,itistrue, isprimarilyoneof
themind
andthespirit. Yetthelink
betweenphysicalstates
andstatesof the mind and the
emotionsneedsno
emphasis. Our theory does not say that physical
statesenterlargelyintothe
spectator'sconsciousness
;
it says that they, orthe suggestion ofthem,area
necessaryprecondition
of
hispleasure. Theirabsence
fromconsciousnessisindeedapointofrealimportance.
Large
modifications in ourphysicalcondition, when
theyoccur,alterourmentalandemotionaltone
;
but,
also, they absorb our consciousness.
A
person, for