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PARALLAX

PARALLAX: introduction

Parallax represents the apparent displacement of an observed object due to a change in the position of the observer. For example, when pictures are taken of a single object but from different positions (angle, closeup, etc), or by lens changes that result in a variety of photographic images yet each picture still represents the same object. 

Furthermore, we assume that facts are singular and identifiable as frozen entities. Yet, whatever singularity we perceive that appearance is false because all identity implicates the principle of mediation. Perception depends on a process wherein a part cannot escape its relational web of complexity. Furthermore, this processing of relationships suggests that everything exists as a collection of parts to serve a larger whole and therein naturally create a narrative. These parts as narratives in larger wholes can be studied as operations in PARALLAX.

From another perspective we can say that holistic relationships can collapse the many parallax views into one to become a single idea. That collapse is the result of a synthesis, be that a generalization of a set of parts or the result of an illuminated insight. The cognizance of any singularity thus means for us to break things up into even smaller parts to determine what is communicated and why these micro-macro patterns all point to an operating principle called narratives in parallax. 

Only for an expansion interest in this subject I mention these objects to provide further insights into the mechanisms of meaning and the creative process for design:

1) The 1974 movie “The Parallax View” which was an American political thriller which story concerns a reporter's investigation into a secretive organization, the Parallax Corporation, whose primary focus is political assassination.

2) Slavoj Zizek’s book “The Parallax View” in which he basically outlines his system of thought to cover a wide range of topics, including philosophy, psychoanalysis, neuroscience, politics, literature, and film.

3) The book Parallax, by architect Steven Holl and his interest in sculptural form-making and the poetics of space, color, and materiality, tracing Holl's ideas on topics as diverse as the "chemistry of matter" and the "pressure of light," and shows how they emerge in his architectural work.