Possibilia: Possible Worlds and the Limitless in Architecture

Speculative architectural projects, by definition, challenge the viewer to understand the relationship between the fictionalised world they portray and the possible states of affairs that have come into existence for the project to ‘exist’. It is the question of how a speculative project can ‘exist’...

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Main Author: Sean Pickersgill
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: TU Delft OPEN Publishing 2017-07-01
Series:Footprint
Online Access:https://ojs-libaccp.tudelft.nl/index.php/footprint/article/view/1186
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author Sean Pickersgill
author_facet Sean Pickersgill
author_sort Sean Pickersgill
collection DOAJ
description Speculative architectural projects, by definition, challenge the viewer to understand the relationship between the fictionalised world they portray and the possible states of affairs that have come into existence for the project to ‘exist’. It is the question of how a speculative project can ‘exist’ in our understanding of the world in a meaningful, non-trivial fashion that is the subject of this article. Employing some basic structural clarity from contemporary modal logic, and from studies in fictionality, it is possible to see a renewed value in the ‘worlds’ that speculative projects describe, and to understand the profound philosophical value in imagining an existence in an ‘other’ world.
format Article
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spelling doaj-art-7fc14432c8a4463d981f39694e30e4de2025-02-03T01:26:35ZengTU Delft OPEN PublishingFootprint1875-15041875-14902017-07-0111110.7480/footprint.11.1.11861469Possibilia: Possible Worlds and the Limitless in ArchitectureSean Pickersgill0University of South AustraliaSpeculative architectural projects, by definition, challenge the viewer to understand the relationship between the fictionalised world they portray and the possible states of affairs that have come into existence for the project to ‘exist’. It is the question of how a speculative project can ‘exist’ in our understanding of the world in a meaningful, non-trivial fashion that is the subject of this article. Employing some basic structural clarity from contemporary modal logic, and from studies in fictionality, it is possible to see a renewed value in the ‘worlds’ that speculative projects describe, and to understand the profound philosophical value in imagining an existence in an ‘other’ world.https://ojs-libaccp.tudelft.nl/index.php/footprint/article/view/1186
spellingShingle Sean Pickersgill
Possibilia: Possible Worlds and the Limitless in Architecture
Footprint
title Possibilia: Possible Worlds and the Limitless in Architecture
title_full Possibilia: Possible Worlds and the Limitless in Architecture
title_fullStr Possibilia: Possible Worlds and the Limitless in Architecture
title_full_unstemmed Possibilia: Possible Worlds and the Limitless in Architecture
title_short Possibilia: Possible Worlds and the Limitless in Architecture
title_sort possibilia possible worlds and the limitless in architecture
url https://ojs-libaccp.tudelft.nl/index.php/footprint/article/view/1186
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