HUMANIST VALUES
235
thismethod, while thebaroquearchitects
soughtto
emphasisemassbythe
magnitudeofthepartsthem-
selves. But
in
both casesthe conditions of
success
werethesame: thewholemust
predominateoverthe
parts,theweightseempowerfullyadjusted,thescale
beconsistentlymaintained.
VI
-^he humanist instinct looks in the world for
physical conditionsthatarerelatedtoourown, for
movementswhicharelike
thosewe
enjoy,
for
resist-
ancesthatresemblethosethatcansupportus,fora
settingwherewe
shouldbeneitherlostnorthwartedX
Itlooks,therefore,forcertainmasses,lines,andspaces,
tendstocreatethemandrecognisetheirfitnesswhen
created. And, by ourinstinctive
imitationofwhat
wesee,theirseemingfitnessbecomesourreal
delight.
/* But besides these favourable physical states,/Dur.
instinctcraves fororder, since
orderisthe pattern
ofthehuman mind\And
thepattern ofthemind,
nolessthanthebody'shumour,maybe
reflectedin
^
theconcreteworld.
/Orderinarchitecture
meansthe
presenceoffixedrelations inthe
position,the char-
acterandthemagnitude
ofitsparts\ It
enablesus
tointerpretwhatwesee with
greaterreadiness
;
it
renders form
intelligible by making
it coherent
;
it
satisfiesthedesireofthe
mind
;
ithumanises
archi-
tecture.