Wednesday, 30 March 2011

HYPOTHESES

hy·poth·e·sis
1. a proposition, or set of propositions, set forth as anexplanation for the occurrence of some specified group ofphenomena, either asserted merely as a provisionalconjecture to guide investigation (working hypothesis)  oraccepted as highly probable in the light of established facts.
2.
a proposition assumed as a premise in an argument.
3.
the antecedent of a conditional proposition.
4.
a mere assumption or guess.

CLIENT: Maria Agnesi

It was her pioneering nature forged the pathway for female academics.
Maria’s focussed and goal driven tendencies helped her succeed in everything she pursued.
Her mathematics studies and her religious practices were contradictory.
She was intent on passing on her knowledge.
She was an introvert – perhaps as a result of being one of many children.

CLIENT: Isacc Newton

He merged religion with sciences and maths.
He brought awareness to the way light is dependent on the material it interacts with.
He was determined to prove that gravity exerts force on everything.
Being overwhelmed by his knowledge of the physical world led to his mental breakdown.
His stubborn attitude hindered his ability to trust his friends and family.

CLIENT: Sigmund Freud

He was calculated in terms of his approach to his research.
His patients were hysterical.
He spent his entire life in poor health.
His life was obscure.
His research methods were unorthodox.

I WOULD SUGGEST YOU PICK TWO FROM EACH TO DRAW YOUR AXOS, CONSIDERING YOU WILL BE DESIGNING FOR 2 OF THESE PEOPLE, SO KEEP YOUR OPTIONS OPEN:

 “Choose a specific hypothesis related to two of the three clients listed above and create an architecture consisting of three spaces. The first two spaces should be at either end of a structure made from 10 interconnected rectangular forms. The third space should be on the landform that articulates a relationship to the rectangular forms. The spaces at either end of the rectangular forms are the clients laboratories (imagine the experiment to test your hypothesis will actually be conducted there). The space on the landform is a place for your clients to meet and exchange ideas. The landform should allow each client to arrive at their meeting in a distinctive and significant way.

4 comments:

  1. Hi I cant seem to be a able to upload my model onto google warehouse, it keeps saying UNAUTHORISED ERROR 401. Do you by any chance know how to get about this? Thanks

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  2. hey man, i know a few others had that same problem, so they created a new account.. and it worked fine.

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  3. Hey ros i cant seem to upload my sketchup model into crysis? ive watched russels tut on how to do it and followed it exactly but, whenever i drag it from the "rollup bar" onto my terrain, nothing comes up jst the z, y, and x axis.. its like my object is invisible? any idea on this?

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  4. Is is a yellow ball or invisible in the Rollup bar?

    Did you press the Playup Check Normals button to check to see if your faces to are facing the right way? Your model should be grey. If you have green faces that means they've been reversed and won't show in Crysis. So just right click the green faces and select reverse faces.

    Also, you can only have one material per model/group/component. I don't think Russell's tutorial mentions that.

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