[2]For instance, in practice, to semantically interpret the relationships and importance between issues of site, object, program, user, structure, systems...etc.
[3]For instance in nature a flower would have multiple conditions of existence whether being a seed, a stem, a bud, or a blossom--all are described as a flower.
[4]For example: an element-column, a room-bathroom, a suburban house, a city.
5J.-P. Changeux, L'Homme neuronal, Fayard, 1983.
6Virilio, 1991, p.56.
7Bryson, p 46.
8Rotman, desribing accounts of perspective.
9Sartre, p 221.
10Barnes, Introduction, Translator, Being and Nothingness, p. 15
11Sartre, relating to the Psychology of Imagination, a treatise on phenomenology which was published in 1940, but later discussed in the main text on Nothingness.
12A project of mine from 402c, in which the computer became integral as a design tool for the representation of the constantly evolving architecture-Advisors Doug Noble, Karen Kensek.
13Eisenman, "The End of the Classical", Perspecta 21, 1984.
[14]Eisenman, p 5.
[15]Eisenman, p5.
16Kipnis, Jeffrey, "Architecture Unbound", 1984.
17Brisson, p. 151.
[18]Martice from Mathcad, representing fourth dimensional points.
19Fuller, direct quotations from Synergetics, as mentioned by line numbers.
[20]Fuller, 105.00.
21Eco, Open Work, p. 117. 22Cage, Music for Five (I) 26' 1.1499" 23Krause, 1993
[24]Lerner, p. 914.
25Hawking, p. 187.
[26]Hawkings, p 75.
[27]Lerner, p 283. Chapter on Electromagnetic Interaction.
[28]Hawkings, p 155.
[29]Hawkings, p 187.