By John Ritchie and James Bascom |
Data Without Wisdom
However, the architectural harmony on campus is shattered by the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Upon entering, one immediately perceives the absence of almost all natural light. The windowless main part of the library denies visitors that most basic natural element: sunlight. It gives the impression of being a lifeless mausoleum, a computerized warehouse for robots rather than an Ivy League library for humans.
Its giant honeycomb shaped walls of faintly-translucent granite placed within gray stone frames, together with the square waffle-pattern ceiling, make the library resemble the inside of a computer chip. The minimalist, square, metallic structure containing books offer the only clue that it is indeed a library. There are few chairs and no tables in sight. Where does one study here?
Just as the modern world tends to transform men into anonymous egalitarian “masses,” stripped of individual personality, so does this library seem to detach knowledge from the proper ambit of the human intellect. The building and the bookcases could just as easily be used to store computer servers, not precious tomes. It is, in effect, a display of relativistic egalitarian architecture, where each book is no greater or lesser than any other.
A library should reflect the wisdom and truth contained in its books. The Beinecke Library, however, reflects neither. The spirit of dehumanized egalitarianism in its architecture relegates the books to the level of mere “data” without beauty or wisdom. As a recent author put it, it is as “ugly as sin.”
Now let us turn to another library at Yale.
Where Noble Thoughts Soar
The vivid clash of two cultures at Yale University. |
Would the harmony of this beautiful library survive if flashy computers were installed? Would a college student hooked on our cyber pop-culture, wearing ripped jeans, flip-flops and body piercing feel comfortable in this dignified atmosphere? Probably not.
Yet libraries like these formed Churchills, not hippies. Yes, this library, unlike the cold, box-like architecture of the Beinecke Library, allows students to embark on new intellectual and spiritual discoveries. This library, steeped in tradition, fosters true progress – progress within the marvelous framework of order created by God.
What noble tradition.
That's a good point regarding the computers, and not merely aesthetically but functionally. Scholarly research rarely requires internet, but hardcopy publications where the sources are readily verified. However, in some areas, such as medicine, the internet helps one to access sources with authentic verification in the field, such as the New England Journal of Medicine in the medical field. Computers are necessary in any research in order to find resources through WorldCat. Still, there is a significant psychological distraction that just about everyone has experienced in most libraries (either public or collegiate) caused by the lack of continuity where computers are introduced into a traditional research area. They should be as separate as possible. Besides, it's really difficult to spread out books and notebooks on a computer desk anyway.
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