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And if he provides the relevant quotes, are you going to change your mind on anything substantial, or just grudgingly concede that specific thing?
No need for this epistemic meta-jousting, full transcript is here. The quotes obviously aren't in there but I was reading them as a (poor) attempt to summarise Eisenman's position.
Because it's sun_the_second that put the quote marks around them.
How is it a poor attempt?
Perhaps my literacy level is not as high as yours, so you will need to help me as exactly where you see a desire to "maximize the amount of discomfort and pain" or "harm your mind", or a claim that "buildings must literally impose psychic harm and pain on the people who view and use the building".
How do you understand the words "harmony" and "disharmony"?
Also, when he says "And I’m not convinced that that is something I should have to live with all my life, just because the majority of people feel comfortable with it." how does that not straightforwardly say he wants to make people uncomfortable?
I primarily understand harmony and disharmony in terms of cleaving to notions of geometric proportionality, e.g. as formalised by Palladio. You could probably extend that to congruity in style and materials, both internally and in context. Personally, I can see deviations from this as well-executed or ill-considered, but it'd be an exceptional case I'd consider to be psychically harmful.
In the second case, he's saying he wouldn't like it if the entirety of his aesthetic experience was like Mantovani, who he regards as popular, but a bit vapid, saccharine, and unchallenging. I'd agree that some buildings, such as his Berlin memorial, succeed by being more challenging and this is appropriate for it's purpose. Conversely, most people wouldn't style their own house en brut, but it still appeals to some people.
But here you're softening the original statement to make it sound plausible. If he really wanted to "maximize the amount of discomfort and pain" his buildings have an unambitious amount of rusty syringes and razored door handles.
I feel like something is being left out by such a technical definition. You can define harmony in music in terms of mathematics too, but I don't think it's wise to completely leave out of the defintion, the effect being constantly bombarded by disharmonious chords would have on a person. And I'm pretty sure Eismann is aware of that, given all the talk of "comfort".
What is supposed to be the difference between "challenging" and "deliberately causing discomfort" in your opinion.
No, you're doing the opposite. For example OP was explicitly talking about "psychic" discomfort and pain, and you deliberately left that out to make him look ridiculous.
Also, an architect will be limited by building safety codes, and the threat of having his license taken away and/or going to prison, which will prevent him from fully leaning into his sadism.
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I am skeptical that:
The quotes from this specific debate will likely not change my mind on 2, 3 and 4.
Do you think this portrayal of his views is more honest than his portrayal of Eismann's views?
That's not what he said. He's saying one of the reasons one might deny that Eismann's aims to maximize disharmony is because they're too low-IQ to understand what he's saying.
That's not what he's saying. He's saying that in the even that you do understand what Eismann is saying, you might be inclined to go into denial, because no one could be this comically evil.
What is the point of all the navel gazing about what Eismann specifically said, if you're not going to change your mind about anything substantial then? If it's just about the specifics of what he said, maybe focus on that?
I do think OP would generalize to all socialist art. Ex. here.
I’d say 3 and 4 are covered by the “middle school” section. OP is using Eisenman, socialists, disharmony as moral imperative, and Brutalist high schools interchangeably. He also categorically ignores the possibility someone might agree with one or more of those things. That partitions anyone who does into the stupid, the motivated reasoners, or the evil.
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Not the person you’re responding to, but the entire discussion is pointless if its main outrageous premise turns out to be completely false. You’re not going to convince me on points 2 through 4 either, but if Eismann did in fact explicitly say he wants to inflict psychic harm, then we can have an interesting discussion about why such cartoonish levels of villainy are allowed to exist in society.
Instead, it appears that Eismann only talked about creating artistic disharmony, and then you equivocate artistic disharmony with psychic harm. The original question of “How is that possible?” is answered with “Because the scenario presented simply wasn’t true.”
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