Inevitable Necessity
The idea
that man is an unconscious victim of external forces, or internal necessities,
is one of the greatest intellectual orthodoxies of our time. Ever since the
waning of traditional religions, men have been convincing themselves of one
inevitable necessity after another, until the point has been reached where some
of them have actually started to become operative in detail. Whether or not
this desire to discover some omnipotent external force signifies an
intellectual rage for order and understanding or rather a deep psychological
drive to identify with a superhuman force and avoid responsibility is open to
question: but its existence is beyond dispute. It can be seen in the Marxist
appeal to inevitable laws of history, in the Freudian appeal to basic drives of
the libido and most recently in the appeal to underlying forces of technology
by Galbraith and McLuhan.
-- Charles Jencks. Architecture
2000: Predictions and Methods
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