Peirce for Architects

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A01=Richard Coyne
abduction methodology
architectural theory
Author_Richard Coyne
BIM Model
biosemiotics
Category=AMA
Category=QDTL
Category=QDTN
Charles Sanders Peirce
Design Methods Movement
Dicent Indexical
Dicent Indexical Sinsign
Dicent Sinsign
Dicent Symbols
digital design process
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
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Forensic Architecture
Iconic Legisign
Iconic Sign
Indexical Legisigns
Indexical Sign
Interconnected Unity
logical reasoning
Peirce's Concepts
Peirce's Contribution
Peirce's Life
Peirce's Maxim
Peirce's Schema
Peirce's System
Peirce's Thinking
Peirce’s Concepts
Peirce’s Contribution
Peirce’s Life
Peirce’s Maxim
Peirce’s Schema
Peirce’s System
Peirce’s Thinking
phenomenology
philosophy of logic
positivism
poststructuralism
pragmatism
Rhematic Indexical
Rhematic Indexical Legisign
Rhematic Indexical Sinsign
Rhematic Symbol
semiotic analysis
semiotics in architectural practice
structuralism
Swiss Linguist Ferdinand De Saussure
theory of semiotics
Thinkers for Architects series
user-centred architecture
Verification Principle

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138319585
  • Weight: 236g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Mar 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Ideas gain legitimacy as they are put to some practical use. A study of Charles Sanders Peirce (1839-1914) supports this pragmatism as a way of thinking about truth and meaning. Architecture has a strong pragmatic strand, not least as we think of building users, architecture as a practice, the practical demands of building, and utility. After all, Vitruvius placed firmness and delight in the company of utilitas amongst his demands on architecture.

Peirce (pronounced 'purse') was a logician, and so many of his ideas are couched in terms of formal propositions and their limitations. His work appeals therefore to many architects grappling with the digital age, and references to his work cropped up in the Design Methods Movement that developed and grew from the 1950s. That movement sought to systematise the design process, contributing to the idea of the RIBA Plan of Work, computer-aided design, and various controversies about rendering the design process transparent and open to scrutiny.

Peirce’s commitment to logic led him to investigate the basic elements of logical statements, notably the element of the sign. His best-known contribution to design revolves around his intricate theory of semiotics, the science of signs. The study of semiotics divided around the 1980s between advocates of Peirce’s semiotics, and the broader, more politically charged field of structuralism. The latter has held sway in architectural discourse since the 1980s. Why this happened and what we gain by reviving a Peircean semiotics is the task of this book.

Richard Coyne is Professor of Architectural Computing in the Edinburgh School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture at the University of Edinburgh. He was formerly Head of the School of Arts, Culture and Environment. He inaugurated the MSc in Design and Digital Media, and is Programme Director of the MSc by Research in Digital Media and Culture. He researches and teaches in architectural theory, design theory and digital technologies, and is author of ten books that include Interpretation in Architecture: Design as a Way of Thinking (with Adrian Snodgrass, 2006), Derrida for Architects (2011), The Tuning of Place: Sociable Spaces and Pervasive Digital Media (2010) and Network Nature: The Place of Nature in the Digital Age (2018).

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