claim
active
claim:the-quality-of-life-includes-us-as-human-beings-a-place-with-the-deepest-life-is-one-where-i-reach-a-deeper-level-of-life-inside-myselfThe quality of life includes us as human beings; a place with the deepest life is one where I reach a deeper level of life inside myself.
Emphasizes the experiential, transformative dimension of life in built environments.
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.
- Core claim that life is a universal, non-biological attribute of all matter.
- Verbatim quote from Alexander (1979, p.19) defining the Quality Without a Name, used to motivate the exploration.
- Verbatim statement of the fundamental hypothesis, defining the scope of life.
- Grounds the practical importance of wholeness in buildings via its effect on human happiness
- Frames Alexander's project as a post-Cartesian philosophical revolution
- Summarizes the chapter’s view that life exists in the very materials of a building.
- A key claim that the life quality is universal and recognizable.