An Ethics of Complexity for Architecture
How does one make decisions and judgments within the practice of architecture? There are no answers to this question, only problems. How one formulates the problem, that is constructs the problem of architecture, effects the nature of the possible solutions, the performance of the designed and constructed buildings. Problems are as much a construction of architectural practice as the actual built building is. As Kojin Karatani describes in his book Architecture as Metaphor, there is a tendency in western philosophy to architecturalize itself. He goes on to say that this “will to architecture” is not limited to philosophy but is latent in much of western thought, from science to the humanities.1 The will to architecture is the act of to constructing thought. It is an act of making. For any conception of architecture must include an idea of making or construction. Continue reading An Ethics of Complexity for Architecture