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Analogies among architecture,
music and machinery

"My
view is that we sometimes--perhaps increasingly-- use machines and other
technology in the same way we use music and musical instruments, to
interpret the world and give it meaning."
Arnold Pacey,
The Meaning in Technology
"we... use machines and other
technology in the same way we use music and musical instruments, to
interpret the world and give it meaning."
Musical instruments, like an archway, have parts that contribute to a functional whole. You must undferstand the relation of the parts to the whole an dthe whole agglomeration to the means and purpose of the technology, or else you miss the point of tools in shaping events today and in the past.

The parts of an arch are:
A.
The keystone both enables and embodies the revolutionary character
of the arch which allows a building to enclose an interior space,
or span a given distance to achieve the grace and the purpose of sustaining
a structure.
B. The parts
of an arch:
- keystone
- voussoirs
- impost
- abutment
or spandrel
- extrados
- intrados
- centre
- span
- springing
line
- haunch or
arc
- crown
| architecture |
music |
machinery |
keystone
|
tune |
lynch
pin |
voussoirs
|
lyrics |
noise |
impost
|
voice |
drive |
abutment
or spandrel
|
instruments |
belts |
extrados
|
melody |
exposed |
intrados
or soffit
|
harmony |
internal |
centre
|
refrain |
of
gravity |
span
|
beat |
rpm |
springing
line
|
chords |
frame |
haunch
or arc
|
scope |
chassis |
crown
|
climax |
movement |
"Because music
is about life...and especially about the parts of life we do not understand."
Rebecca West quoted in Pacey, Meaning,
Singing the World.
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