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Figures of Thought and the Socius
Author(s) -
Arie Graafland
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
cubic journal/cubic journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2589-7101
pISSN - 2589-7098
DOI - 10.31182/cubic.2018.1.001
Subject(s) - urbanism , architecture , field (mathematics) , sociology , engineering ethics , epistemology , architectural engineering , engineering , visual arts , philosophy , art , mathematics , pure mathematics
Starting from a faculty wide discussion on teaching architecture and urbanism in the nineties at the TU Delft, Faculty of Architecture, I develop a brief historical overview of more recent planning and mapping techniques. During the many meetings at the faculty, discussions swept from ‘architectural’ approaches, to ‘computational’, to ‘urban’, and ‘scientific’. Although more professional experts were involved, coming from Maastricht University where new teaching models were introduced earlier on, the meetings never ended in a consensus on how to teach urbanism. What seemed to be lacking was a more historically informed approach. I use James Corner’s four approaches to mapping techniques to show not merely a ‘technique’, but the ‘how’ and ‘why’ of a particular approach. Every planning technique creates its own ‘social field’ in which it operates: the socius.

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