The
Interior Castle
By Richard Thieme
The spatial
metaphor of architecture has deep implications. A house, for example,
is an archetypal symbol for the psyche; when we dream of houses,
we are dreaming of our interior "space." Teresa of Avila's The Interior
Castle described spiritual development as analogous to the exploration
of hidden rooms. Similarly, orators in ancient Greece retained speeches
by memorizing, say, the Temple of X; as they spoke, they "walked"
through rooms collecting paragraphs.
Today, the
redundancy of architectural spaces as the parameters of games, GUIs,
and desktops recapitulates at a higher level of abstraction the
practice of those oral cultures: the 3-D interface is in fact an
image of our "inner space," providing a framework in which to imagine
and remember. When we look at the Web, we are one pair of eyes (like
the many-faceted eyes of bees) looking at an image of ourselves,
our hive mind.
©
1997 Wired Magazine Group, Inc. All rights reserved. Reprinted by
permission.
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