'Seeing the fact that most of our contemporary ways of dealing with architecture have been insane, I turned my back on them, and started from scratch. ... It has grown, and now may be called a coherent view of what architecture ought to mean.' C.A.


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Christopher Alexander
THE NATURE OF ORDER

Book I - The Phenomenon Of Life
476 pages, ISBN 0-9726529-1-4, USD 75.00

Christopher Alexander's series of groundbreaking books — including A Pattern Language and The Timeless Way Of Building — have pointed to fundamental truths of the way we build, revealing what gives life and beauty and true functionality to our buildings and towns. Now, in The Nature Of Order, Alexander explores the properties of life itself, highlighting a set of well-defined structures present in all order — and in all life — from micro-organisms and mountain ranges to good houses and vibrant communities.

In The Phenomenon Of Life, the first volume in this four-volume masterwork, Alexander proposes a scientific view of the world in which all space-matter has perceptible degrees of life and sets this understanding of order as an intellectual basis for a new architecture. With this view as a foundation, we can ask precise questions about what must be done to create more life in our world — whether in a room...a humble doorknob...a neighborhood...or even in a vast region.

He introduces the concept of living structure, basing it upon his theories of centers and of wholeness, and defines the fifteen properties from which, according to his observations, all wholeness is built. Alexander argues that living structure is at once both personal and structural.

Taken as a whole the four books create a sweeping new conception of he nature of things which is both objective and structural (hence part of science) — and also personal (in that it shows how and why things have the power to touch the human heart). A step has been taken, through which these two domains — the domain of geometrical structure and the feeling it creates — kept separate during four centuries of scientific thought from 1600 to 2000, have finally been united.

The four volumes can be read separately, independently, and in any order. However, it is together that they have their greatest impact as each one informs and illuminates the others.

Here, then, the culmination of decades of intense thinking by one of the most innovative architects alive.



...continue to Book II: The Process Of Creating Life...