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Homeorrhetism: Few Observations on the Nature of Experimentation in Computational Architecture (2011)

article⁄Homeorrhetism: Few Observations on the Nature of Experimentation in Computational Architecture (2011)
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abstract⁄From the point of view of computation, concerns over the nature of an experiment raise questions that often belong to a deductive reasoning in other words the possibility to understand the world in terms of established principles and theories What kind of information should be extracted from our environment What would be a comprehensive system of information that reflects the complexity of our world How can one assure objectivity in the building of a model In contrast, the experimental context of architecture calls for a different set of questions How can a model convey the meaning of our world What kind of effect is the model supposed to create Why a particular model is more likely to express the condition of a culture versus another Here, concerns over the inductive nature of the experimental protocol prevail, or in other words, the questions do not call for fixed principles but a range of possibilities often related to the cultural, social and even political sensitivity of the experimenter. These distinctive sets of questions therefore range from deductive to inductive experimental approaches. Most importantly, they express the essence of the now established field of computational architecture and its capability to propel a confluence of knowledge a form of transdisciplinarity that oscillates between architecture’s core knowledge and its disciplinal periphery. While both deductive and inductive assumptions are prerequisite to operative experimentations, the question remains as to the principles managing their confluence.
keywords⁄2011archive-note-no-tags
Year 2011
Authors Sprecher, Aaron.
Issue ACADIA 11: Integration through Computation
Pages 360-361
Library link N/A
Entry filename homeorrhetism