eprintid: 10163496 rev_number: 10 eprint_status: archive userid: 699 dir: disk0/10/16/34/96 datestamp: 2023-10-23 12:13:04 lastmod: 2023-10-23 12:51:33 status_changed: 2023-10-23 12:13:04 type: proceedings_section metadata_visibility: show sword_depositor: 699 creators_name: Griffiths, Sam creators_name: Quick, Tom title: How the individual, society and space become structurally coupled over time ispublished: pub divisions: UCL divisions: B04 divisions: C04 divisions: F36 note: This version is the version of record. For information on re-use, please refer to the publisher’s terms and conditions. abstract: How are we to understand the ambiguous nature of a space: the simultaneous possibility of standing still, moving around it or moving through it? To answer this question requires ‘seeing’ the configuration through the eyes of the human subject. Taking the phenomenological formulation of the subjective ‘lifeworld’ and bringing to it our knowledge of spatial properties identified by space syntax techniques, it becomes possible to conceive of an individual’s interpretative horizon as possessing an identifiable morphology, developed historically through situated social practices, which brings forth reality for the embodied subject. Space syntax theory rejects the man-environment paradigm, positing instead an emergent socio-spatial configuration that generates the co-presence and movement necessary for social existence. However, the question of precisely how the human subject engages in re-embodying the spatial configuration remains opaque. One reason for this is the absence of a clear understanding of what it is meant by ‘embodiment’ in space. Consequently, the generative, ‘bottom-up’ nature of the spatial configuration appears absent from analyses more concerned with its top-down functioning. In effect this privileges the structural and generic over the historical and contingent aspects of the space-society relation. This paper reasserts the role of the individual actor embodied in space. We present an empirically grounded definition of ‘embodiment’ based on information theory and structural coupling to provide a bottom-up account of the emergent congruence between space, the individual and society. Embodiment, so defined, implies that human subjects’ relation with their ‘environment’ is multi-faceted; that the emergence of a relational socio-spatial system consists of agents coupling with the environment and with each other, developing relationships through the transformation of their internal structures. date: 2005-06-01 date_type: published publisher: Techne Press official_url: http://www.technepress.nl/ oa_status: green full_text_type: pub language: eng primo: open primo_central: open_green verified: verified_manual elements_id: 316635 isbn_13: 9789085940029 lyricists_name: Griffiths, Sam lyricists_id: SGRIF58 actors_name: Griffiths, Sam actors_id: SGRIF58 actors_role: owner full_text_status: public pres_type: paper series: International Space Syntax Symposium publication: Proceedings 5th International Space Syntax Symposium volume: 2 place_of_pub: Amsterdam, The Netherlands pagerange: 447-458 pages: 11 event_title: 5th International Space Syntax Symposium event_location: TU Delft: Delft event_dates: 13 Jun 2005 - 17 Jun 2005 isbn: 9085940028 book_title: Proceedings of the 5th International Space Syntax Symposium editors_name: Van Nes, Akkelies citation: Griffiths, Sam; Quick, Tom; (2005) How the individual, society and space become structurally coupled over time. In: Van Nes, Akkelies, (ed.) Proceedings of the 5th International Space Syntax Symposium. (pp. pp. 447-458). Techne Press: Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Green open access document_url: https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10163496/1/griffithsquick_coupling_2005.pdf