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Mintys: GyvybėsDėsniai


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Koks gyvybės dėsnių vaidmuo meilės moksle?


生活的属性



Gyvybės dėsniai išsako keturis asmenų tyrimus kūryba vykstančius keturiuose lygmenyse. Juos visus sieja trys bendri dėsniai: tvirti židiniai, aiškios ribos, laipsningi mąstai, kuriais derinami skirtinguose lygmenyse vykstantys tyrimai.

Gyvybės dėsniai yra pagrindimo kalbos sandai iš kurių kyla įtampa, jėgos, kurias suderina geometrijos patikslinimas. Gyvybės dėsniai nusako plotmę ir jos santykį su mumis ir su reiškinių židiniu. Židinys išeina už savęs į mus, išeina iš plotmės į platesnę erdvę su mumis. Mes liudijame Židinio išėjimą už savęs.

Atitinkamai turėtų ryškėti keturios geometrijos ir jų patikslinimai.



Penkiolika gyvybės dėsnių


Fifteen principles as transformations (Book II of The Nature of Order)


Christopher Alexander gyvybės dėsnius suprasti kaip aplinkybių veiklą. Kiekvieną aplinkybę galime suvokti kaip atskiro mato derinimą, užtat kaip dviejų priešingybių priešpastatymą. Tai akivaizdu "proto žaismuose", pavyzdžiui:

ChristopherAlexander's Fifteen Principles of Life

AndriusKulikauskas: I went through ChristopherAlexander's TheNatureOfOrder (see the website of the book [http://www.natureoforder.com here]) and his fifteen principles of life. I understand these to be the three perspectives of the {{Threesome}} and the twelve Topologies that are given by the four RepresentationsOfTheThreesome .

I will describe the fifteen principles as the features by which {{Anything}} may connect itself with {{Something}} so that the latter is a center of life.

Imagine two points on a page. If you consider the page a closed system, then the center between the points will be in the plane of the page. But if you consider yourself part of the system, if you admit of an outer vantage point, then the system shifts so that now the center is out of the page. I am sure it will have more life then. We have to think of how to connect the system with that which is beyond it. In art, ideas like major, minor, accent assume that there is a viewer, that the art is not onto itself. (Palyginti su Simplex? židiniu.)

Three of Alexander's properties of life describe this relationship just as it is. Where is the anything? Here it is in the recursive nature, going ever deeper, inward, but also, going back outward, farther than we may imagine. (But we can't conceive this, as it is actually the nature of everything.)

Where is the anything? Anything is identified with the relaxation of global centers to allow for restatement through local centers.

Where is the anything? Anything is identified with that which searches for centers, perhaps finding one (and breaking symmetry) or not finding one (and leaving symmetry) but especially in the regularity of the "many", which blankets the entire space with centers.

Where is the anything? Anything is identified with that which gives attention to centers, and especially, the subject, the ambiguity and interlock.

Where is the anything? Anything is identified with that which serves as the center, and especially the void, what is possible.

We may think of these structures as arising from analogous SelfReinforcing activity.

Also, we may think at each level that there is a global principle, and a local implication, and a deference of the global to the local, thus yielding NikosASalingaros's principles. In particular, necessary, actual and possible are his laws for global, local and intermediate differentiation, accordingly.


Be strongstrong centers attract other centers without disturbing them (connect with other centers)strong boundaries share a boundary zone (equalize) with other centers where new centers can growlevels of scale centers grow as large as they can without disturbing the existing centers (or their scales)

Centers and subcentersnot-separateness serve as a center for subcenters of other centersgradients influence only in the direction of your motion, variationroughness allow for variation of your subcenters (relaxation)
Center and global forces (incoming links)good shape crystallize, purify, localize the balancing of conflicting forceslocal symmetries align with the prevailing axis of symmetrypositive space push the boundary out from the center
Center and local attention (outgoing movement)contrast move like centers to one side of a boundaryechoes shift attention to similar centers (same balance) regardless of scaledeep interlock and ambiguity shift attention to what is similar on both sides of a boundary
Centers and supercenterssimplicity and inner calm align with every center you are withinalternating repetition yield to a force so as to exhaust itvoid tranfer links from a center to a larger center that contains it

===NikosASalingaros' Laws for Architecture===

Nikos has three laws of structural order. These are laws that maximize differentiablility.

Nikos then groups Christopher Alexander's principles as follows

Missing principles: Contrast and SimplicityAndInnerCalm. Included principle: StrongBoundaries.

===Thinking Further===

We may furthermore think of these structures as evoked by recurring activity.

I need to relate the {{Anything}} which is beyond {{Something}}'s plane, with the pulling away which makes for the {{Needs}}, {{Doubts}}, {{Expectations}}, {{Commitments}}, as in is, seems, ought, choose.

Note that anything is a limited {{Observer}}, whereas something is a limited {{Observed}}. Everything is a general observer and nothing is a general observed. See {{Scopes}}.

===A Letter Which Explains My Thinking===

I got The Nature of Order by Christopher Alexander, so I have taken that with me. It is great, and very helpful for me at this time.

As an architect, he wrote earlier about What makes a building alive? and is now thinking more generally about life. But also, about our understanding of it, particularly why are we building buildings with so little life, and why are we living in them.

I will write what his thoughts mean to me.

A major gripe of his is that we have become overly used to studying systems by thinking of them as isolated mechanisms in their own right. In this sense, they become closed systems, detached and dead. Imagine two points on a page. If you consider the page a closed system, then the center between the points will be in the plane of the page. But if you consider yourself part of the system, if you admit of an outer vantage point, then the system shifts so that now the center is out of the page. I am sure it will have more life then. We have to think of how to connect the system with that which is beyond it. In art, ideas like major, minor, accent assume that there is a viewer, that the art is not onto itself.

For me this is about finding the connection between any particular, bounded whole (anything) and the absolute, unbounded whole (everything). He calls these "centers". I think of there being an everything, and then, in reaching out beyond itself, it allows itself not to be, but in that "nothingness" allows for such centers to likewise arise, gods who know not themselves, so to speak. These are bounded, in structure, but otherwise arisen of the same nature as the everything.

He writes of fifteen properties of life that he goes through. He finds these as ways that centers relate to each other. They are:

I have a hypothesis for what they are. I think that they are features by which "anything" may connect itself with "everything" as centers. They are the ways that anything goes beyond itself and comes to that original everything.

I have been working to unify those four structural families. It seems that each one relates the division into three (taking a stand, following through, reflecting) with one of its four representations. Each one of these representations makes use of a vantage point for God of different degrees of awareness. They are:

Where I have listed them in increasing order of Gods empathy, so that in the first representation he is flat, but in the last he has a full fledged threefold vantage point. In each case his role is to live within us the principle of "taking up anothers concerns rather than our own", which is to say, reaching out beyond ourselves.

It is important to note here that the perspectives of the division into three are themselves inconceivable (taking a stand, following through, reflecting) by us, we need to represent them. How can that be? Well, I am claiming that we can not directly conceive of taking a stand. It is simply something that we actually do. We live it! So to actually think about it is quite awkward. Instead, we think of it as a passage between states. It may be the passage between thinking and being. Or the passage between what is possible and what is necessary. In the latter case I think it becomes the principle "strive for the best". But my point is that we are dealing with it as a passage.

So, in order to try to directly think about it, I think we try to express the representations themselves in terms of passages. That way we get passages of passages.

Well, I think that of Alexanders 15 principles, 3 come from the division into three, and 12 from the representations. So my claim is that 3 of his are inconceivable.

But I see why this is, I think. He gives an example of a lovely vase showing a recurring beautiful 3 to 1 proportion of scales, nested. I think the purpose of these level scales is that they allow us to suppose that there is an outer frame, pragmatically an everything, that must exist. And functionally, our upper torso may in fact be 3 to 1 in proportion to the vase. So such is the purpose of all the properties of life, to generate this connection.

But because this does it so directly, there is a problem which makes it inconceivable! Because here we would have to imagine infinitely many levels going smaller and smaller. We can not do this. Likewise for nested boundaries. But in other cases, relating centers of an equal level, we can. It is like the relation between human and God, we can not conceive directly, but instead appeal to relations between humans, which serve I think for this ultimate purpose.

===Historical Notes===

I wrote the letter above when I was traveling in 2003. Then I thought of these as relationships between everything and anything. But actually, given my current thinking about SecondaryStructures, and in particular, topologies, I should describe them as relationships between {{Something}} and {{Anything}}. Here, something equals not-everything, and indeed, instead of imagining a plane of everything, this allows us to consider the complementary space of something, which then coincides with and is centered in the anything that enjoys our focus.

Here is some of my earlier thinking: We can think of "everything" and "anything" as players that wish to link up with each other. "Anything" plays through a trinity of roles: taking a stand, following through, and reflecting. This cycle is the motor of our life. "Everything" plays by going beyond itself. It is the infinite recursiveness of Why? It is the same recursiveness in the cycle of our soul - taking a stand, following through, reflecting - which is how we are conscious of everything.


{{Andrius}} [http://groups.yahoo.com/group/livingbytruth/message/363 September 4, 2003]

I went through Christopher Alexander's "The Nature of Order" and his fifteen principles of life.

I will describe them as the features by which "anything" may connect itself with "everything" as centers of life, limited and unlimited.


We can think of "everything" and "anything" as players that wish to link up with each other.

"Anything" plays through a trinity of roles: taking a stand, following through, and reflecting. This cycle is the motor of our life.

"Everything" plays by going beyond itself. It is the infinite recursiveness of Why? It is the same recursiveness in the cycle of our soul - taking a stand, following through, reflecting - which is how we are conscious of everything.

Three of Alexander's properties of life describe this relationship just as it is.

"take a stand" is in "strong centers" (made of other strong centers) "follow through" is in "strong boundaries" (same order of magnitude as centers. itself made up of boundaries) "reflect" is in "levels of scale" (recursive nesting. regular size jumps between scales)

Where is everything? Here it is in the recursive nature, going ever deeper, inward, but also, going back outward, farther than we may imagine.

We are limited, hence unable to conceive directly our connection, but may only allude to it. Our conception is thus given not by this infinite recursion, but through representations of everything. Everything is represented in four ways, as true, direct, constant, significant. Moreover, in its relationship with anything, it is given as a player of a mind game which generates properties of life, of the oneness of the spirit beyond and within structure, of everything and anything.


"Significant" generates a mind game, where significant is that which is unencompassable, can't be captured: If thinking is significant, then so is being, for thoughts are encompassed by the thinker. If being is significant, then so is doing, for things are encompassed by the actions that manifest them. If doing is significant, then so is thinking, for actions are encompassed by the observations made of them.

where is the everything? everything is identified with the relaxation of global centers to allow for restatement through local centers.

"be" is in "not-separateness" (not apart from the world, lack of separation from other centers, blending into them, supporting them, fragmented boundary) "do" is in "gradients" (slow variation of larger center makes for gradient given by new centers) "think" is in "roughness" (relaxation of global constraints so local constraints can have priority)


"Constant" generates a mind game: In searching for constancy, we find one example of constancy, otherwise it is constantly unconstant. So the constancy is in the "one" or in the "all". Note that to do this search, what we select needs to be the same as what we judge, they are multiply constant, "many".

where is the everything? everything is identified with that which searches for centers, perhaps finding one (and breaking symmetry) or not finding one (and leaving symmetry) but especially in the regularity of the "many", which blankets the entire space with centers.

"one" is in the "good shape" (as a shape, made of multiple coherent centers, built from simple elemental structures, clear building blocks with distinct symmetries. regularity allows for cross- relationships, clear division of function, etc.) "all" is in the "local symmetries" (default solution is symmetry, a pre-filling of space) "many" is in the "positive space" (every part is whole onto itself, not leftover, has a strong center. all space useful, evenhanded complements, no wasted space.)


"Direct" generates a mind game: Our attention can be directed by something other than itself, an "object". Subsequently, it can be directed by itself, this is "process". Finally, it may or may not be directed, this is "subject".

where is the everything? everything is identified with that which gives attention to centers, and especially, the subject, the ambiguity and interlock.

"object" is in the "contrast" (creation of differentiation, acknowledgement of purposeful, meaningful centers) "process" is in the "echoes" (repetition of motif at different levels, same angles as building blocks, same process involved) "subject" is in the "deep interlock and ambiguity" (center and its complement enmeshed by shared and ambiguous subcenters)


"True" generates a mind game, where true is what can't be hidden, is obvious:

The content and what reveals it may be the same, in which case it is "necessarily" true. Otherwise, the content may be different from what reveals it, and follows it, so is "actually" true. Finally, what may be true is the relationship between the content and what reveals it, which is "possibly" true.

where is the everything? everything is identified with that which serves as the center, and especially the void, what is possible.

"necessary" is in the "simplicity and inner calm" (unnecessary is taken away, freely focused on function. slow) "actual" is in the "alternating repetition" (intensified by counterpoint of systems. continually engages the eye, recurring action, space repeats, oscillation) "possible" is in the "void" (solid contrast to the clutter that surrounds it, connects with infinite void, brings life to mass of small centers)

The 24 {{Concerns}} are self-reinforcing.

Christopher Alexander's fifteen PrinciplesOfLife describe self-reinforcing activity.

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