claim
active
claim:all-examples-of-deep-life-across-different-times-and-places-look-the-same-in-their-deep-structural-qualityAll examples of deep life, across different times and places, look the same in their deep structural quality.
A key claim that the life quality is universal and recognizable.
Neighborhood — ranked by edge-count
Claims (1)
claim
- We experience an intense feeling of life in many traditional artifacts and works of art, from Minoan vases to Persian bowls.associated_withCentral aesthetic claim illustrated by the picture sequence in section 7.
Related by similarity (8)
cosine ≥ 0.65 · no typed edgeEntities in the same semantic neighborhood but without a typed relation to this one — candidates for new edges or unrecognized duplicates.
- The research question that drove the twenty-year empirical study and resulted in the fifteen properties
- Emphasizes the experiential, transformative dimension of life in built environments.
- Extends the brutal geometry thesis beyond architecture into all creative and social domains; acknowledged as not yet confirmed with certainty
- Once the initial volume and site design is done, its essential feeling is fixed; later work can only deepen it.
- Categorical assertion about the necessity of the living process.
- Central premise of the paper.
- The central thesis of the chapter, setting up the explanation of how life emerges.
- The operational question that guided the extraction of the fifteen properties from thousands of comparisons