Necessity of space

Christy Lee-Engel cdleee at gmail.com
Tue May 5 23:09:51 PDT 2009


Hi dear Doug,

Well, your question reminds me of hearing friends talk about architect
Christopher Alexander's work, in which he emphasizes that "space must be
considered an almost living entity – a kind of stuff which, depending on the
recursive structures that are built up in it, becomes progressively more and
more alive."

So that space can be more alive or less alive.

I haven't read Alexander's 4-Volume "The Nature of Order" yet, and so I
don't know what "these fifteen properties" are - but this quote from a book
review makes me want to read it and find out!:

"Systems in space which have these fifteen properties to a strong degree
will be alive, and the more these properties are present, the more the
systems which contain them will tend to be alive."

http://natureoforder.com/overview.htm

love & blessings,

Christy



On 5/5/09, douglas germann <76066.515 at compuserve.com> wrote:
>
> Hi space dancers:
>
> Recently someone pointed us to a poem about how open spaces are
> necessary for a fire. It has had me pondering.
>
> At first I said, Sure, she is speaking of oxygen. Fires need oxygen. Now
> I am not so sure that is what she meant, or at least what is true. So I
> am asking you my friends, what you have observed.
>
> Just how important is the physical space for opening space? I am not
> talking about amenities like chairs and windows and air, nor about the
> exact number of square meters needed per person (this is cultural: some
> cultures want to be close enough to feel each other's breath; some want
> more distance). In Open Space Online we have a metaphorical space for
> our chats; in face to face, we have that physical space. Is that space
> in the center of the circle a separate, unnoticed but essential, element
> in conversation?
>
> The flames need to lick upwards, the heat needs someplace to go, the
> light needs to escape. The betweens are necessary to give birth to the
> what and who is emerging from our collective. What is the role of space?
>
>                                :- Doug.
>
>

*
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