history Archives - The Architectural Mythologems https://thearchitecturalmythologems.com/tag/history/ PHILOSOPHY AND PRACTICE OF ARCHITECTURE Tue, 24 Mar 2026 21:14:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://thearchitecturalmythologems.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/cropped-TAM-Large-Icon-JPEG-1-1-32x32.jpg history Archives - The Architectural Mythologems https://thearchitecturalmythologems.com/tag/history/ 32 32 Thesis and Anti-thesis | Interpretations of Basic Mandalas https://thearchitecturalmythologems.com/thesis-and-anti-thesis/ https://thearchitecturalmythologems.com/thesis-and-anti-thesis/#respond Fri, 03 May 2024 16:07:46 +0000 https://thearchitecturalmythologems.com/?p=8088 Audio Essay: Thesis and Anti-thesis Freedom vs. Destiny It’s easy to fall into the trap and assume that the opposite of freedom is an empty lack of freedom or imprisonment. “The soul is free when it is educated.” – M. Eckhart, Goethe On the opposite side of freedom lies a choice. The Choice is what ends…

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Audio Essay: Thesis and Anti-thesis


Freedom vs. Destiny

It’s easy to fall into the trap and assume that the opposite of freedom is an empty lack of freedom or imprisonment.

“The soul is free when it is educated.” – M. Eckhart, Goethe

On the opposite side of freedom lies a choice. The Choice is what ends freedom and reduces it to actualization. Freedom is potential (numerous) choices, and Destiny (non-freedom) is one choice.

We make this choice, or the external makes the choice for us. The illusion is of the individual assuming otherwise.

The drawing of the simplest mandala is the most illustrative example of the relationship between freedom and Destiny, potential and actualisation.

Mandala 1

A circle describing a point. The circle is an infinite series of points (choices), or an exponent of freedom, while the point in the middle represents the “singularity” of Destiny, or as Jung says, the Self.

Ref: Jung’s autobiographical sketches of daily Mandalas


Mandala 2

A circle cut in half (into two semicircles). In this mandala, the separation of the whole by the Center line is shown. Two sets, thesis and antithesis. This mandala in its simplest interpretation represents three points, connected by a straight line (alignment of three points). Thesis, Antithesis, and the Relation between. The point of relation (Center) is an exponent of the Self and the basic reference point based on which thesis and antithesis are aligned (recognized). This Mandala is the first step in the coordinate determination of the Self and the first step towards Destiny Choice.


Mandala 3

A circle describing a point, and connected by a spiral. We all want to reach the Center, and we reach it through “freedoms”. Freedoms decrease, or “purify”, in cycles, and gravitate towards the Center. The Center is the Goal and the final step.

Freedoms push, the Center pulls. Ref: Terence McKenna and the theory of time (novum).


Maturity of consciousness is needed for Destiny. Infantile awareness, as the predominant collective neurosis, complicates this form of awareness. In a Biblical sense, the Devil is dressed in “new” garments and presents himself as the most beautiful angel, freedom.


Comment:

Free will and multiverse movies

We can often interpret movies as compensatory manifestations of our collective (or personal) shortcomings. The era of superhero movies portrays a picture of individual impotence, which is somewhat understandable due to the time we live in. However, multiverse movies provide a more interesting compensation. Compensation for the lack of free will. By depicting endless arrays of potential scenarios and possible realities, they relativize the importance of singularity behind phenomena but provide the comfort of indefiniteness (freedom).

Individual state – How Human is greater than the Cosmos

The collective existence of indefiniteness is permissible to the Cosmos, which measures its story in billions of years, and its development has practically just begun, however, this is not a good position for the individual.

Our insignificance in years, on the other hand, offers us a solution.

Every story consists of three constituents: Beginning, Middle, and End. These constituents make up the story of the Cosmos as much as they make up the story of a single Human. Although our experience of the Cosmos is of something almost Infinite, although we feel practically frightened by this magnitude, there exists in us another feeling of greatness standing as opposition to this fear. That greatness is the greatness of hypothetical inner infinity, which is as great as the external infinity, only its miniature representation.

Both infinities stand in a parallel, balanced relationship. However, while the external Infinity will potentially need hundreds of billions of years to reach the “Middle” of its Story, inner Infinity has the advantage of accelerated development.

Wrong unit of measurement (reference)

“So the World works, so will I,” is the basic fallacy. The “World” has time. The World is part of the Cosmic narrative.

The entirety of our story (beginning – middle – end) is written and played in about 100 years. All chapters, all transformations, all conceptualizations, all actualizations, all archetypal representations.

The differences between the beginning and the middle, as well as the middle and the end, are evident. These are differences between the young and the mature, the mature and the wise. It is also evident that the world is still in the infancy of its teenage years. This child is not an ethical-aesthetic norm, but merely a reference to the stage of development. A reference to the collective antithesis, which is at the beginning of development and will need much more time to mature.

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Architecture is a living symbol https://thearchitecturalmythologems.com/architecture-is-a-living-symbol/ https://thearchitecturalmythologems.com/architecture-is-a-living-symbol/#respond Tue, 20 Dec 2022 09:20:01 +0000 https://thearchitecturalmythologems.com/?p=7580 Building a World that Reflects Our Aspirations: The Importance of Architecture in Self-Realization Architecture is a living symbol. A symbol built from the memory of the ancestral cave we come from, and the fractal edifice we aspire to. In the interspace of history and the future, memory and anticipation, reality and fantasy, the architectural symbol…

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Building a World that Reflects Our Aspirations: The Importance of Architecture in Self-Realization

Architecture is a living symbol. A symbol built from the memory of the ancestral cave we come from, and the fractal edifice we aspire to. In the interspace of history and the future, memory and anticipation, reality and fantasy, the architectural symbol is the imago of the process ego that strives for the absolute. In this sense, architecture can be seen as a manifestation of the “eternal return,” the idea that history repeats itself and that the present is always connected to the past (Nietzsche).

Architecture is an extension of the image of man, ergo an extension of the image of life. Architecture is not just a physical structure, but a reflection of the present and a manifestation of historical knowledge. It has the power to create harmony between the past and present and to serve as a place where one can recognize themselves.

Ideal, as an image, is a formative tool, not an instance on the path of individuation. Architecture mediates between opposing extremes by negotiating the tension between practical needs and guiding ideals. It connects the physical and spiritual, the material and intangible, functioning as a form of “dialectical synthesis,” reconciling opposing forces and resolving contradictions (Hegel). The architect Louis Kahn famously said, “A great building must begin with the unmeasurable, must go through measurable means when it is designed and in the end must be unmeasurable”

In conclusion, architecture describes and defines the world in which we live, by creating physical manifestos of our ideals and dreams. It allows us to build a world reflecting who we are and what we aspire to be. As a mirror of “self-realization”, it is a vital part of the individuation process, helping us define and express our unique identities and values. Jean-Paul Sartre observed, “Man is nothing else but that which he makes of himself”


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