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What's Wrong with Plastic Trees: Artifice and Authenticity in Design

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

What's Wrong with Plastic Trees: Artifice and Authenticity in Design

Contributors:

By (Author) Martin Krieger

ISBN:

9780275967765

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Praeger Publishers Inc

Publication Date:

30th April 2000

UK Publication Date:

30th April 2000

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Architectural structure and design
Technical design

Dewey:

721.01

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

184

Dimensions:

Width 140mm, Height 216mm

Weight:

369g

Description

Krieger revisits the ideas of his now infamous article of some thirty years ago in Science magazine. His aim is to give an account of design, one that experienced designers will say,'Yes, That's just what it is like!' At the same time, Krieger offers an analysis of the tensions that design operates within; between perfection and contingency, between wholes and parts, between the talk we make about the world and the world itself. Krieger takes designin architecture, landscape, interiors, engineering, and in systems and computer scienceto be modeled by traditional theological and artistic problems. And here, he claims, design has traditionally been a redesign of nature. For nature is, as Durkheim would describe it, a totem. Our collective ritual devotion to it allows us to enliven or animate it, and so it may animate us as well. Curiously, much of design and discourse about it now takes place in the computer software engineering world, especially among those concerned with patterns and object- oriented programming. In developing a notion of plastic trees, Krieger probes just what could be wrong with such artifices. As he illustrates, what we call nature is almost always a product of deliberate design. It is as if people make discoveries in exploration, discoveries of places already occupied aboriginally. In essence, he asserts what we actually have is a virtual authenticity, more real than any original could possibly besince the original was never meant to be sacralized or featured in our lives. A provocative analysis that scholars and students of architecture and planning, environmental studies, engineering and computer science will find stimulating.

Author Bio

MARTIN H. KRIEGER is Professor of Planning at the School of Policy, Planning, and Development of the University of Southern California. He has taught at University of California, Berkeley, University of Minnesota, Twin-Cities, MIT, and University of Michigan, Ann-Arbor, and he has been a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Science and at the National Humanities Center. His earlier books include The Constitutions of Matter: Mathematically Modeling the Most Everyday of Physical Phenomena and Doing Physics: How Physicists Take Hold of the World.

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