So we use models. How do these function? What do we do with them? A model of meaning gives us a reference for how we ought to understand the nature of things. Think of Lacan's diagram of the self. Think of Freud's mystic writing pad. Think of Kepler's model of the universe, or Descarte's. Now think of how architects have used various models of meaning from mathematics. That's all I'm asking you to do. Just see how they use it. And then look for contradictions. Not in order to confute them, but to recognize that is one of the things we do. It just is.
Try going to studio with a mayline, or a fist full of watercolor markers and tell your instructor "I'm going to do it this way, hell with Maya.". Try modeling your project in just cubes of foam and say "Hell with curves and nurbs"
Tell me what the response is.
Now. Ask your instructor: "But really, what is a surface as opposed to a plane? What is a curved surface and what is a spline?". Or if they are using grids, ask them about those. Ask why you have to conceive of geometry in the way they are asking you to. Just ask.
It should be an interesting conversation.
And maybe they'll give you models of meaning. Maybe
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Tuesday, September 30, 2008
What is a model?
Labels:
Bernard Cache,
boullee,
durand,
geometry,
peter macapia,
topology,
vitruvius,
wittgenstein
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