
Post-Anthropocene, Human-Nature Dichotomy, and Machines with Curt Budd
Published on Aug 20
40:09
0:000:00
<p style="hyphens:auto;line-height:30px;text-align:justify;" data-flag="normal">Hello everyone, this is Trajectory, and I’m your host, Walter Wang. The guest in today’s episode is <strong style="color:#FC5832;word-break:break-all;font-family:Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif;font-weight: normal;">Curt Budd</strong>. Curt is a fantastic designer and also a friend who I really admire from school. He’s is a recent graduate from Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, and just started working as a designer down in Los Angeles. We talked about what the <strong style="color:#FC5832;word-break:break-all;font-family:Helvetica,Arial,sans-serif;font-weight: normal;">post-</strong><b>Anthropocene</b> could mean to architecture in the relevant and immediate future, and how Curt dissected the capitalist<b> human-nature dichotomy</b> in his thesis. The divorce with old human-nature relationships brought our attention to Eastern philosophies and metabolism in Japan in the 1960s. In the end, we found there ...