Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W12867197> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 80 of
80
with 100 items per page.
- W12867197 abstract "In my first paper to this Symposium, it was argued that the human cognitive subjectplayed a key part the shaping and working of the city. The key mechanism was thesynchronisation of diachronically experienced (and usually diachronically created)information into higher order pictures of spatial relations, the guiding form for whichwas an abstracted notion of a grid formed by linearised spaces. This notion wasargued to be both perceptual and conceptual, serving at once as an abstractedrepresentation of the space of the city and as a means of solving problems, such asnavigational problems. In this paper, the question addressed is where the notion ofthe ideal grid comes from, why it has the properties it does, and what it has to dowith the real grids of cities, which are commonly of the 'deformed' or 'interrupted'rather than 'ideal' kinds (Hillier, 1996). The answer, it is proposed, lies in the verynature of complex spaces, defining these as spaces in which objects are placed so asto partially block seeing and going, and, in particular, in certain divergences in thelogics of metric and visual accessibility in such spaces. The real grid, deformed orinterrupted, is, it is argued the practical resolution of these divergent logics, and theideal grid its abstract resolution. In both resolutions, however, the resolution is moreon the terms of the visual than the metric, suggesting that cognitive factors are morepowerful than metric factors in shaping the space of the city. The question is thanraised: do people have or acquire the concept of the grid, perhaps as some kind ofperceptual-conceptual invariance of spatial experience in complex spaces, and dothey use it as a model to interact with complex spatial patterns of the urban kind?This possibility is examined against the background of current opinion in the cognitivesciences." @default.
- W12867197 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W12867197 creator A5010614951 @default.
- W12867197 date "2003-06-17" @default.
- W12867197 modified "2023-09-26" @default.
- W12867197 title "The architectures of seeing and going:or, are cities shaped by bodies or minds? And is there a syntax ofspatial cognition?" @default.
- W12867197 hasPublicationYear "2003" @default.
- W12867197 type Work @default.
- W12867197 sameAs 12867197 @default.
- W12867197 citedByCount "16" @default.
- W12867197 countsByYear W128671972012 @default.
- W12867197 countsByYear W128671972015 @default.
- W12867197 countsByYear W128671972017 @default.
- W12867197 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W12867197 hasAuthorship W12867197A5010614951 @default.
- W12867197 hasConcept C111472728 @default.
- W12867197 hasConcept C111919701 @default.
- W12867197 hasConcept C127413603 @default.
- W12867197 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W12867197 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W12867197 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W12867197 hasConcept C169760540 @default.
- W12867197 hasConcept C169900460 @default.
- W12867197 hasConcept C170494330 @default.
- W12867197 hasConcept C176217482 @default.
- W12867197 hasConcept C187691185 @default.
- W12867197 hasConcept C188147891 @default.
- W12867197 hasConcept C21547014 @default.
- W12867197 hasConcept C2524010 @default.
- W12867197 hasConcept C2776639384 @default.
- W12867197 hasConcept C2777103068 @default.
- W12867197 hasConcept C2778572836 @default.
- W12867197 hasConcept C33923547 @default.
- W12867197 hasConcept C41008148 @default.
- W12867197 hasConceptScore W12867197C111472728 @default.
- W12867197 hasConceptScore W12867197C111919701 @default.
- W12867197 hasConceptScore W12867197C127413603 @default.
- W12867197 hasConceptScore W12867197C138885662 @default.
- W12867197 hasConceptScore W12867197C144024400 @default.
- W12867197 hasConceptScore W12867197C15744967 @default.
- W12867197 hasConceptScore W12867197C169760540 @default.
- W12867197 hasConceptScore W12867197C169900460 @default.
- W12867197 hasConceptScore W12867197C170494330 @default.
- W12867197 hasConceptScore W12867197C176217482 @default.
- W12867197 hasConceptScore W12867197C187691185 @default.
- W12867197 hasConceptScore W12867197C188147891 @default.
- W12867197 hasConceptScore W12867197C21547014 @default.
- W12867197 hasConceptScore W12867197C2524010 @default.
- W12867197 hasConceptScore W12867197C2776639384 @default.
- W12867197 hasConceptScore W12867197C2777103068 @default.
- W12867197 hasConceptScore W12867197C2778572836 @default.
- W12867197 hasConceptScore W12867197C33923547 @default.
- W12867197 hasConceptScore W12867197C41008148 @default.
- W12867197 hasLocation W128671971 @default.
- W12867197 hasOpenAccess W12867197 @default.
- W12867197 hasPrimaryLocation W128671971 @default.
- W12867197 hasRelatedWork W1483123661 @default.
- W12867197 hasRelatedWork W1503549511 @default.
- W12867197 hasRelatedWork W1529253181 @default.
- W12867197 hasRelatedWork W1606320738 @default.
- W12867197 hasRelatedWork W1656883498 @default.
- W12867197 hasRelatedWork W1933657216 @default.
- W12867197 hasRelatedWork W1999287994 @default.
- W12867197 hasRelatedWork W2092291476 @default.
- W12867197 hasRelatedWork W2104674083 @default.
- W12867197 hasRelatedWork W2112626384 @default.
- W12867197 hasRelatedWork W2126116380 @default.
- W12867197 hasRelatedWork W2150935245 @default.
- W12867197 hasRelatedWork W2182495256 @default.
- W12867197 hasRelatedWork W245622248 @default.
- W12867197 hasRelatedWork W2494910683 @default.
- W12867197 hasRelatedWork W2529057781 @default.
- W12867197 hasRelatedWork W2739694408 @default.
- W12867197 hasRelatedWork W3000393032 @default.
- W12867197 hasRelatedWork W3093805927 @default.
- W12867197 hasRelatedWork W2124122006 @default.
- W12867197 isParatext "false" @default.
- W12867197 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W12867197 magId "12867197" @default.
- W12867197 workType "article" @default.