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Online usersPollWhat should the government do about ailing financial institutions? Nothing, except to back off and get out—as any Objectivist knows, intervention is treating the disease with the disease 84% Intervene judiciously—enough to avert a catastrophe that is otherwise imminent 3% Intervene massively—as it's doing 3% Nationalize the whole economy and be done with it. Bring on the USSA! 1% Something else (specify) 9% Total votes: 76
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The Greatness of Man's Mind in His BuildingsSubmitted by Callum McPetrie on Tue, 2007-07-24 06:56.
Man's mind, when put to use, can be a marvelous thing. We witnessed this today with the Burj Dubai overtaking Taipei 101 as the World's Tallest Building. Although it is now officially the tallest, it still has around 200-300 metres left before topping out, at about 800 metres (the official height is being kept a secret). The greatness of the mind when put to use can produce incredible feats of engineering. This has been seen throughout the ages, from the Pyramids and the Sphinx of Ancient Egypt, to the Colosseum during Rome's heyday, the great Cathedrals of the Middle Ages, the bridges and tunnels of the Victorians and recently skyscrapers soaring several hundred metres into the air. But these aren't just "big box" buildings, or brutalist 1960's commercial commieblocks; man's great buildings are also feats of engineering and aesthetics. They are designed to be look good and feel the same way. They are true feats of man's mind. (to the point, I think we all know why Howard Roark's career was an architect!) Keep up the good work, architects of the future-and don't return to the 1960s!
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Callum, I agree with you nearly 100%.
Whenever I need inspiration, a visit to Skyscraper Page or Skyscraper City usually does the trick. What I especially like about those two forums (which I think you've also mentioned elsewhere) is seeing great buildings from different perspectives, i.e., perspectives of the members who care enough to photograph and post them. Of course, it's sometimes difficult to deal with that anti-"growth" crowd endemic to urban discussions; I've learned to only respond to factual misstatements. Regardless, I usually ignore the comments and just enjoy the pics!
For the record: another great source for architecture is SOLO user Peter Creswell's del.icio.us Bookmarks.