This thesis has been written in partial fulfilment of the requirements for obtaining
the degree of a Doctor of Philosophy at the Centre for Advanced Inquiry in Integrative Arts (CAiiA), Planetary Collegium, School of Art and Media, Faculty of Arts, University of Plymouth, UK. The research was begun
in the summer of 2003 as practice based research, and undertaken on a part-time basis. Its First Supervisor was Prof. Roy Ascott, and its Second
Supervisor Prof. Mike Phillips.
The thesis research is situated within the field of Architecture. Its principle
objective is the articulation of arguments for a new theory of architecture
as an architectural poetics, and related to this, a new form of discourse as poetry
of an architectonic order.
The research was initiated through a series of questions that architects
confront when asked to create and to speak about what can be understood to
be(come) frameworks for (unknown) life. It thus deals with the question of
the unknown and, related to this, the question of open form. It develops on
the idea that a concept of inhabitation may be feasible exclusively on the basis of a theory that extends the well known two-valued logic that has been dominant
in the Western world since the times of classical metaphysics. Rooted
in philosophy, the research extends contemporary architectural and critical theory, notions from poets such as Paul Celan, Marguérite Duras and Samuel Beckett, and research in second order cybernetics – the latter with an emphasis on Gotthard Günther’s writings on Non-Aristotelean logic. The text’s focus is on the notion of Architecture as a transcendental concept.
It advances the understanding of Architectural Design as a performative
process that creates borders rather than borderlines, limits rather than limitations
and, is therefore, a discipline of radical communication that always seeks to extend itself towards an Other – the unknown – addressing it without previously quantifying it to render it provable.
The research furthers the field of Architecture by contributing to it a new theory in the form of an architectural poetics. It addresses questions of design with a procedural framework in which critical engagement is an intrinsic
principle, and offers an alternative to existing discourses through a poetry of
architectonic order that is open to the future.
Date of Award | 2011 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Supervisor | Roy Ascott (Director of Studies (First Supervisor)) & Mike Phillips (Other Supervisor) |
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- Inhabitable
- Poiesis
- Architecture
- Poetics
- Transdisciplinary
- Practice based
- Inhabitable theories
An Experimental Research into Inhabitable Theories
Westermann, C. (Author). 2011
Student thesis: PhD