presentation of unity

All places present the their own unity. A place presents itself as a field for actions. Actions have to be identifiable in order to be intended, and actions stretch over time and space. So an identifiable field with temporal and spatial unity must be presented by the place.

The presented unity of a place can be very minimal, or quite baroque, and there are new kinds of more discontinuous unities. Still there has to be some presented unity to the place, and themes present such unity in their own particular ways.


Index
all are liable

(c) David Kolb, 1 August 2001