Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Intensive--
When something is divided into two equal
parts, their intensive properties will not be divided.
Extensive--
Values that can be divided such as mass, vol-
ume, measurement.
Difference in Kind--
They have a clear, and fixed identity. In chess, each piece has its
own specific rules that it must follow and it’s own particular characteris-
tics. Similarly, classical architectural orders follow that same logic.
Difference in Degree--
Difference in degree in contrast, has no intrinsic meaning outside
of its contextual relationships. It is its relation to its neighbor that create
difference within the whole. You can find zones within the overall that
display different characteristics. In the game of Go, every piece is alike,
but it is how they are formed together that creates the game.
Part to Whole Relationships
Complex hierarchy--
involves both top-down and bottom-up hierarchies operating in
a feedback loop. This enables the emergence of new organizations and
new architectural effects out of the whole that is not reducible to its
parts. “These emergent organizations become legible not as parts to a
whole but as whole-whole relationships.” In other words, the whole is
more than the sum of its parts.
Similarity and Difference
“You can’t have similarity without difference, and you can’t have differ-
ence without similarity.”
-Claude Levi-Strauss
The idea that similarity can arrive out of difference and difference can
arrive out of similarity, and that they are not mutually exclusive.
The example given here is that perhaps the racehorse is closer the grey-
hound than it is to the drafthorse and perhaps the drafthorse is closer
to the oxen than they are to each other. While they look alike, and are
both types of horses, on a performative level, they are much closer to
different animals.
Fineness
This topic looks at the idea that architecture is not resolved within the
logic of a single model, surface, or material. Rather, architecture deals
with assemblies of multiple materials, models, and surfaces.
Fineness breaks down the fabric of building into finer and finer parts so
that it can register small differences while maintaining an overall whole
that is coherent.
In the example to the right, it is important to find the right level of fine-
ness. If it is too fine, it acts as a homogenous solid. If it is too coarse,
and it is constrained to its members. Architecture must do the same,
and find the right balance between material geometry and force.
The Diagram