There is a topic long absent from architectural discourse: the role of spirit in architecture. How do space and material act as conduits for the ineffable, engaging forces that exceed rational form yet shape human perception and inner life? Architecture, like music or poetry, may be mute in language yet eloquent in presence, charged with an
energy that animates the everyday. To acknowledge this dimension is not to abandon reason, but to recognize that
beyond calculation and function, architecture harbors a life that is better felt than spoken.