BRAC (Oct 2021)

Kinaesthetic Perception and Architecture

  • Esen Gökçe Özdamar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17583/brac.5397
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 3

Abstract

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This article highlights the review of the kinaesthetic perception derived from the words Greek kinein (to move), and aesthesis is defined as the perception of movement in architecture. Kinaesthetic perception is defined as “a sense mediated by end organs located in muscles, tendons, and joints and stimulated by bodily movement and tensions,” and “sensory experience derived from this sense”. Since the 1960s, kinaesthetic perception, known as a term in neurology, psychology, orthopedics, and medicine, has been explored for creativity, especially in architecture, art, dance, particle animation, hypermedia, and game theories. This perception has been studied in Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenology in architectural theory and education and in terms of the oblique idea of Paul Virilio and Claude Parent, which have emerged as one of the important and triggering terms of kinaesthetic perception in architecture today. With the advent of technology, re-introducing this perception through technology or traditional means can help us remember the multidimensional interaction of our senses. Therefore, this article examines an interdisciplinary relationship between kinaesthetic perception, architecture, and movement, and the body or soma and asks what kinaesthetic perception can provide new experiences in architecture.

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