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Till We Have Built Jerusalem [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 325 pages, Illustrations
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Mar-2007
  • Izdevniecība: ISI Books
  • ISBN-10: 193223697X
  • ISBN-13: 9781932236972
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 35,57 €*
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  • Šī grāmata vairs netiek publicēta. Jums tiks paziņota lietotas grāmatas cena.
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  • Pievienot vēlmju sarakstam
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 325 pages, Illustrations
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Mar-2007
  • Izdevniecība: ISI Books
  • ISBN-10: 193223697X
  • ISBN-13: 9781932236972
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
“The city comes into existence . . . for the sake of the good life.” So wrote Aristotle nearly 2,400 years ago, articulating an idea that prevailed throughout most of Western culture and the world until the environmental consequences of the Industrial Revolution called into question the goodness of traditional urban life. Urban history ever since—from England’s early-nineteenth-century hygiene laws to mid-twentieth-century modernist architecture and planning to today’s New Urbanism—has consisted of efforts to ameliorate the consequences of the industrial city by either embracing or challenging the idealization of nature that has followed it.

Architect Philip Bess’s Till We Have Built Jerusalem puts forth fresh arguments for traditional architecture and urbanism, their relationship to human flourishing, and the kind of culture required to create and sustain traditional towns and city neighborhoods. Bess not only dissects the questionable intellectual assumptions of contemporary architecture, he also shows how the individualist ethos of modern societies finds physical expression in contemporary suburban sprawl, making traditional urbanism difficult to sustain. He concludes by considering the role of both the natural law tradition and communal religion in providing intellectual and spiritual depth to contemporary attempts to build new—and revive existing—traditional towns and cities, attempts that, at their best, help fulfill our natural human desires for order, beauty, and community.
Preface xi
Introduction xvii
Part One: Cities and Human Flourishing
Virtuous Reality: Aristotle, Critical Realism, and the Reconstruction of Architectural and Urban Theory
3(28)
Democracy's Private Places
31(6)
Design and Happiness
37(14)
The Architectural Community and the Polis: Thinking about Ends, Premises, and Architectural Education
51(14)
Part Two: The Sacred and the City
Making Sacred: The Phenomenology of Matter and Spirit in Architecture and the City
65(14)
Beyond Irony: Biblical Religion and Architectural Renewal
79(16)
A Dutch Master and the Good Life
95(12)
Design Matters: The City and the Church
107(28)
Sacramental Sign, Neighborhood Center: A Proposal for Catholic Churches in the Twenty-First Century
135(16)
Religion and New Urbanism
151(6)
Part Three: New Urbanism
The Polis and Natural Law: The Moral Authority of the Urban Transect
157(32)
New Urbanism and Politics: A Conservative Case for Urbanism
189(4)
After Heroes: Nietzsche or Chesterton?
193(24)
Part Four: Critical Essays
Architecture and Otherness
217(10)
Peter Eisenman and the Architecture of the Therapeutic
227(10)
St. Colin Rowe and the Architecture Theory Wars
237(20)
The Rhetorician of Urbanism
257(12)
The Old Urbanism
269(28)
Postscript: In the Neighborhood
275(4)
Appendices
The New Urbanism: From Aristotle and God to Baseball
279(12)
The Case for Fenway Park
291(6)
Index 297