🌟 Exclusive 2024 Prime Day Deals! 🌟

Unlock unbeatable offers today. Shop here: https://amzn.to/4cEkqYs 🎁

The Mental Disorders that Gave Us Modern Architecture

Disir

Platinum Member
Sep 30, 2011
28,003
9,610
910
How did modern architecture happen? How did we evolve so quickly from architecture that had ornament and detail, to buildings that were often blank and devoid of detail? Why did the look and feel of buildings shift so dramatically in the early 20th century? History holds that modernism was the idealistic impulse that emerged out of the physical, moral and spiritual wreckage of the First World War. While there were other factors at work as well, this explanation, though undoubtedly true, tells an incomplete picture.

Recent advances in neuroscience point to another important factor: one reason modern architecture looked so different than past constructions was because its key 20th century founders literally didn’t see the world in a “typical” fashion. They couldn’t. Their brains had been either physically altered by the trauma of war or, like Le Corbusier, they had a genetic brain disorder. And while their recommendations for “good design”—a new world, a clean slate—certainly reflected their talent, ambition, and drive, their remedies also reflected their brains’ specific disorders.

In recent years, several authors and physicians have described the father of modernism, Le Corbusier (1887-1965), the Swiss-French architect, as autistic. Writers, such as the critic and psychiatrist Anthony Daniels, and the biographer Nicholas Fox Weber, have come to the conclusion that the Swiss-French architect met the diagnostic criteria for autism spectrum disorder (ASD). They’ve chronicled his impaired social communications, repetitive behaviors, abnormal fixations (including a fascination with concrete), and apparent absence of interest in others.

“For all his genius, Le Corbusier remained completely insensitive to certain aspects of human existence,” Weber writes in Le Corbusier: A Life (Knopf 2008). “His fervent faith in his own way of seeing blinded him to the wish of people to retain what they most cherish (including traditional buildings) in their everyday lives.”
The Mental Disorders that Gave Us Modern Architecture

Hmmmm..................that is a bit interesting and it's going to take a minute to digest.
 
I love architecture. I have had computer programs that let me design structures and it was complicated to the point it was it was nearly impossible. For starters, the cost structure, the materials and their dynamics, the environment and the land, is it sandy or clay or the drainage. Let alone the flow of that home and the design itself and how it works. I am in awe of people like Frank Loyd Wright. Artist all have some kind dysfunction as well as of an insight.
 
I'm waiting for someone who can build me an Escher house, that functions.
 
Once again, our resident central planner assures us he knows what's best for everyone else.

This time, it has to do with what HE thinks the building on your property should look like.

Isn't is great to know we have folks like this that can tell us commoners what we should and what we should not like?

Yea, pass.
 
Once again, our resident central planner assures us he knows what's best for everyone else.

This time, it has to do with what HE thinks the building on your property should look like.

Isn't is great to know we have folks like this that can tell us commoners what we should and what we should not like?

Yea, pass.
:eusa_eh:
Did you not refill your meds?
 
All artists have some affliction, I am like Vincent Van Gogh. Epileptics see things though filters.
 
Once again, our resident central planner assures us he knows what's best for everyone else.

This time, it has to do with what HE thinks the building on your property should look like.

Isn't is great to know we have folks like this that can tell us commoners what we should and what we should not like?

Yea, pass.
:eusa_eh:
Did you not refill your meds?

An ad hominem logical fallacy response?

Color me shocked.
 
Once again, our resident central planner assures us he knows what's best for everyone else.

This time, it has to do with what HE thinks the building on your property should look like.

Isn't is great to know we have folks like this that can tell us commoners what we should and what we should not like?

Yea, pass.
:eusa_eh:
Did you not refill your meds?

An ad hominem logical fallacy response?

Color me shocked.
Logical fallacy? I'm not the one lost in a logical fallacy........ Try looking in the closest mirror.
 

Forum List

Back
Top