- If touch was generally ranked as the lowest of the senses then the highest position was accorded to…
Cowan, Alexander & Steward, Jill
-
Koolhaas, Rem
-
Robert-Fleury, Tony
-
Superstudio
-
Rowe, Collin
- First I relate to my house, then to the street, then to the district and then the city.
Smithson, Alison and Peter
- The surface area of housing is not the only one identified with the habitat. [...] My real habitat…
Paquot, Thierry
- from Latin habitare: to live, dwell; stay, remain.
online etymology
-
Arata, Isozaki
- from Old French habit, abit: clothing, (ecclesiastical) habit. from Latin habitus: condition…
online etymology
-
Google
-
Graffunder, Heinz
- Mistake [noun]: a fault in understanding, perception, interpretation, etc.
Collins Dictionary
-
Archigram
-
Aristotle
-
UNKNOWN
-
Unknown
-
Andre, Carl
- Necessity [noun]: fact that something must happen; something that cannot be avoided.
Collins english dictionary
-
Kriegman, Blackinston, Levin, Bongard
-
Harrison, Niel
- A sensible industrial system will seek to put men, as well as timber, stone and iron, in the places…
Parsons, Frank
-
Franco, Tim
-
Unknown
- Axiom [noun]: a statement or proposition that needs no proof because its truth is obvious.
Collins Dictionary
-
Unknown
- You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall not commit adultery.’ But I tell you that anyone who…
Matthews
- The acts of the flesh are obvious: sexual immorality, impurity and debauchery; idolatry and…
Galatians
- On the great scale of things, all things are Madness; on the small scale, the whole itself is…
Foucault, Michel
-
Cook, Sir Peter
-
STANKOWSKI, ANTON
-
Hall, David
-
LE CORBUSIER
- Navigate your city by alternative means, follow piles of smell, of sound, whatever. When a desire…
Payne, Oliver & Relph, Nick
- THE FUN THING ABOUT GAMES is RISK.
PEREC, GEORGES
- Man was created out of desire, not out of necessity.
BACHELARD, GASTON
-
hollein, hans
-
Sant'Elia, Antonio
- Freedom is something which is constantly produced. Liberalism is not acceptance of freedom; it…
Foucault, Michel
-
Henner, Mishka
- […] Yet will a few traces of old-time sin live on, to bid men tempt the sea in ships, girdle towns…
Vergilius, Publio Maro
- The socialization of art represents the convergence of the forces of creation and production toward…
Hays, Michael K.
- Men neither bought nor sold; there were no poor and no rich; there was no need to labour, because…
Vyāsa
-
Henner, Mishka
- Deep down, many minds will not accept the similarity between two words as having no meaning: they…
FREUD, SIGMUND
-
Kolářová, Běla
-
Nasa
-
Archizoom
-
Kolářová, Běla
-
Vermeer, Johannes
-
Henner, Mishka
-
riha, karl
-
WOOD, JOHN
- Man, I can assure you, Is a nasty creature.
Molière
-
馬遠(ma yuan)
-
馬遠(ma yuan)
- In the philosophy of mind, [...] dualism denotes [...] that the mind and body are distinct and…
WIKIPEDIA
-
Pitt, Suzan
-
馬遠(ma yuan)
-
Event Horizon Telescope
-
Ebbets, Charles
-
馬遠(ma yuan)
-
Af Klint, Hilma
-
馬遠(ma yuan)
-
Hadfield, Chris
-
馬遠(ma yuan)
-
馬遠(ma yuan)
-
馬遠(ma yuan)
-
Candilis, Josic, Woods
-
馬遠(ma yuan)
-
Lawler, louise
-
Anderson, Wes
-
Antonioni, Michelangelo
-
LIBESKIND, DANIEL
-
Koolhaas, Rem & Vriesendorp, Madelon
-
TANAKA, ATSUKO
-
NORDMAN, MARIA
-
Viola, Bill
-
DEBORD, GUY & JORN, ASGER
-
ESO
-
Buckminster Fuller, Richard
-
ARAKAWA/GINS
-
Gaudi Antoni
-
BRODSKY, ALEXANDER
-
Ishiguro, Hiroshi
- Art was a union of the father and mother worlds, of mind and blood. It might start in utter…
Hesse, Hermann
-
Cranach, Lucas
-
Vergara, Camilo Jose
-
Internationale Situationniste
-
Sorrentino, Paolo
-
Hancock, Herbie, Rodriguez, Alfredo
-
Coppola, Sofia
- Randomness caught on the wing, preserved, reproduced by the machinerie of invariance and thus…
Monod, Jacques
-
KUROSAWA, AKIRA
- Drown out of the realm of pure chance, the accident enters into that of necessity, of the most…
Monod, Jacques
-
RTS
- The initial elementary events which open the way of intention in the intensely conservatives…
Monod, Jacques
-
Coppola, Sofia
- The Darwinian idea that the initial appearance, evolution and steady refinement of ever more…
Monod, Jacques
- What desire can be contrary to nature since it was given to man by nature itself?
Foucault, Michel