Architectural Forms and Philosophical StructuresPeter Lang, 2003 - 276 pages Architectural Forms and Philosophical Structures examines architectural and architectonic forms as products of philosophical and epistemological structures in selected cultures and time periods, and analyzes architecture as a text of its culture. Relations between architectural forms and philosophical structures are explored in Western civilization, beginning in Egypt and Greece and culminating in twentieth-century Europe and America. Architecture, like all forms of artistic expression, is interwoven with the beliefs and the structures of knowledge of its culture. |
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... Rome , the Vatican , Hertziana , and American Academy Libraries . The following chapters were developed from papers ... Rome , 2000 ; from " Francesco Borromini and Athanasius Kircher " at the Conference on Neoplatonism and the Arts in ...
... Rome , the Vatican , Hertziana , and American Academy Libraries . The following chapters were developed from papers ... Rome , 2000 ; from " Francesco Borromini and Athanasius Kircher " at the Conference on Neoplatonism and the Arts in ...
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... Rome . Dur- ing those ten years I wrote several essays analyzing the relation between other architectural forms and ... Rome . The architectural forms of Bor- romini are seen to be visual representations of philosophical structures found ...
... Rome . Dur- ing those ten years I wrote several essays analyzing the relation between other architectural forms and ... Rome . The architectural forms of Bor- romini are seen to be visual representations of philosophical structures found ...
Page 52
... Rome in 1450. Cusanus ' closest friend was Paolo Toscanelli , the mathematician and astronomer who was also a close friend of Leon Battista Alberti . The ideas of Cusanus and Alberti can be seen to correspond to each other in certain ...
... Rome in 1450. Cusanus ' closest friend was Paolo Toscanelli , the mathematician and astronomer who was also a close friend of Leon Battista Alberti . The ideas of Cusanus and Alberti can be seen to correspond to each other in certain ...
Contents
Architecture and Cosmology in Ancient Egypt | 5 |
Architecture and Cosmology in Ancient Greece | 35 |
Francesco Borromini and the Construction of Meaning | 51 |
Copyright | |
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abstraction Amon Ancient Ancient Egypt architect architectural forms Athanasius Kircher Baroque architecture Bernardo Vittone body Cabinet of Doctor Caillois Carceri Carlo alle Quattro celestial chaos circle columns combination conception consciousness corresponds cosmology created cupola Cusanus darkness described divine Doctor Caligari dream earth Egypt Egyptian elements enacted Endless House Ennead experience Ficino Francesco Borromini Frederick Kiesler Freud geometrical Georges Bataille Gilles Deleuze goddess gods Gothic Guarini Guarino Guarini Hathor heavens Hermes hierarchy Horus human Ibid images infinite inner inscribed Jacques Lacan Kiesler Kircher labyrinth Lacan laceration lantern Leibniz light manifest material mathematical mind monad Monadology multiplicity nature Neoplatonic Osiris perception perspectival construction philosophical Piranesi Plato primordial principle process of creation psychophysiological space pyramid Quattro Fontane rational reality realm relation representation represented Rome sensation signifying structure soul spatial sublime substance symbol temple tetractys thought tion transgression triangles unconscious unity universe Vathek Visions of Excess visual Vittone