Architecture and Complexity - Part 3 - Peter Eisenman

Lecture date: 1994-05-06 During the late 1960s and early 1970s a call for greater complexity in architecture and urban design arose. Simultaneously, individual researchers in diverse areas of physics, chemistry, biology, economics, mathematics and computer science were formulating new approaches to problems previously considered either intractably complicated or outside the realm of science. Over the following decades these discrete researches eventually coalesced into complexity theory. Peter Eisenman - Affect, Singularity and Aggregation
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