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Biological Life: The Pedagogy of an Architectural Concept

conference contribution
posted on 2023-05-23, 04:42 authored by Loo, S
This paper analyses the techniques and technologies mobilized under the imprimatur of biological life in architectural production beyond their manifestations as (bio)mimetic processes. The arguments do not take 'life' as a priori to architectural thinking, but as immanent to each enactment of technique or application of technology within the biological paradigm. Using the work of Roger Caillois on pyschasthenia as the collapse of space between an organism and its milieu, the analysis avoids elevating biological life to a transcendent concept. Biological life in architecture instigates the pragmatic concern for whether a philosophical or scientific concept works, or matters, regardless of whether it fits within an ontology or metaphysics. Thus, architectural production using biological life subscribes to a Deleuzo-Guattarian "pedagogy of a concept" - the creation of perceptual and affective habits that are self-jeopardising and highly idiosyncratic to ensure further concept formation.

History

Publication title

Techniques and Technologies, Transfers and Transformations

Editors

Kristen Orr and Sandra Kaji-O'Grady

Pagination

144-149

ISBN

978-0-9802840-4-1

Department/School

School of Architecture and Design

Publisher

University of Technology Sydney

Place of publication

Sydney, NSW, Australia

Event title

AASA

Event Venue

Sydney, NSW, Australia

Date of Event (Start Date)

2007-09-27

Date of Event (End Date)

2007-09-29

Rights statement

© Association of Architecture Schools of Australasia, 2007

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Expanding knowledge in built environment and design

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