Anonymous wrote:I would definitely add the University of Richmond to this list.
Anonymous wrote:University of Puget Sound. Pretty buildings. Nice quad. Lots of evergreens. In a nice city (Tacoma) but you can still see Mount Ranier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m thinking PP smoked enough weed that UCSB was always beautiful (even if someone hazy) to them.
Don’t do weed or other illegal substances …. and apparently you have trouble grasping nuance around the obvious fact that taste is not universal ….
You’d have to be blind to not see how beautiful the nature around UCSB is. The buildings don’t compete with that breath taking natural beauty ….
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UCSB for nature - hard to beat Pacific ocean on three sides and mountain on the other. The mid twentieth century - modern Architecture is a matter of taste but it fits the gorgeous nature in that it does not compete with it but facilitates a relaxed, bike centric college experience … very different vibe most to NE USA colleges but beautiful in a different way …
Sorry that campus is HIDEOUS. The only thing it has going for it is the Pacific. Otherwise, the buildings look circa 1960 Soviet Union.
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Unlike NE historic campuses, UCSB allows space for one’s mind to create its own narrative and it does not compete with the sublime nature for attention from styles popular with our European colonizers …
“Without imagination, things were only as they appeared - and that was blindness. Things were more than they appeared, so much more. When he considered an oak tree, it was not just a tree. To someone small, like an ant, it was a whole landscape of rugged barky cliffs and big green leaf-plains that quaked when the sky was restless, a place of many strange creatures where fearsome winged beasts could pluck and devour someone in a blink.”
― Jonathan Renshaw, Dawn of Wonder
“Beauty is no quality in things themselves: It exists merely in the mind which contemplates them; and each mind perceives a different beauty.”
― David Hume, Of the Standard of Taste and Other Essays
“The quality of beauty lies on
how beholder values an object.”
― Toba Beta, My Ancestor Was an Ancient Astronaut
“Beauty Is In The Mind of The Beholder.”
― Amit Abraham
Even, if I were to agree with you that UCSB architecture represents the height of bad taste, which I do not, there is a certain allure to architecture that defies the stifling boundaries of good taste …
Bad taste creates many more millionaires than good taste. Votes: 1
Charles Bukowski
To achieve harmony in bad taste is the height of elegance. Votes: 1
Jean Genet
But I have bad taste with a deep fount of intellectuality. Votes: 1
Mel Brooks
Bad taste is simply saying the truth before it should be said. Votes: 1
Mel Brooks
What is exhilarating in bad taste is the aristocratic pleasure of giving offense. Votes: 1
Charles Baudelaire
It's bad taste to be wise all the time, like being at a perpetual funeral. Votes: 1
D. H. Lawrence
In my estimation, the only thing that is more to be guarded against than bad taste is good taste. Votes: 1
Russell Lynes
Wow, really butthurt about your alma mater!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UCSB for nature - hard to beat Pacific ocean on three sides and mountain on the other. The mid twentieth century - modern Architecture is a matter of taste but it fits the gorgeous nature in that it does not compete with it but facilitates a relaxed, bike centric college experience … very different vibe most to NE USA colleges but beautiful in a different way …
Sorry that campus is HIDEOUS. The only thing it has going for it is the Pacific. Otherwise, the buildings look circa 1960 Soviet Union.
![]()
Unlike NE historic campuses, UCSB allows space for one’s mind to create its own narrative and it does not compete with the sublime nature for attention from styles popular with our European colonizers …
“Without imagination, things were only as they appeared - and that was blindness. Things were more than they appeared, so much more. When he considered an oak tree, it was not just a tree. To someone small, like an ant, it was a whole landscape of rugged barky cliffs and big green leaf-plains that quaked when the sky was restless, a place of many strange creatures where fearsome winged beasts could pluck and devour someone in a blink.”
― Jonathan Renshaw, Dawn of Wonder
“Beauty is no quality in things themselves: It exists merely in the mind which contemplates them; and each mind perceives a different beauty.”
― David Hume, Of the Standard of Taste and Other Essays
“The quality of beauty lies on
how beholder values an object.”
― Toba Beta, My Ancestor Was an Ancient Astronaut
“Beauty Is In The Mind of The Beholder.”
― Amit Abraham
Even, if I were to agree with you that UCSB architecture represents the height of bad taste, which I do not, there is a certain allure to architecture that defies the stifling boundaries of good taste …
Bad taste creates many more millionaires than good taste. Votes: 1
Charles Bukowski
To achieve harmony in bad taste is the height of elegance. Votes: 1
Jean Genet
But I have bad taste with a deep fount of intellectuality. Votes: 1
Mel Brooks
Bad taste is simply saying the truth before it should be said. Votes: 1
Mel Brooks
What is exhilarating in bad taste is the aristocratic pleasure of giving offense. Votes: 1
Charles Baudelaire
It's bad taste to be wise all the time, like being at a perpetual funeral. Votes: 1
D. H. Lawrence
In my estimation, the only thing that is more to be guarded against than bad taste is good taste. Votes: 1
Russell Lynes
Anonymous wrote:Recently toured all the ivy schools, one full day for each. Yale and Princeton are the obvious two outstanding in terms of campus beauty. Saw many pictures of the two schools before, but were really awed by the in-person visit. One should pay them a visit and walk the ground yourself to feel the sensation if these schools are on your mind for application. None of the other campuses can quite strike one with this unusual feeling.
Anonymous wrote:Recently toured all the ivy schools, one full day for each. Yale and Princeton are the obvious two outstanding in terms of campus beauty. Saw many pictures of the two schools before, but were really awed by the in-person visit. One should pay them a visit and walk the ground yourself to feel the sensation if these schools are on your mind for application. None of the other campuses can quite strike one with this unusual feeling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UNC Chapel Hill has a lovely, picturesque campus and is located in a quintessential, charming college town.
That campus now seems overbuilt.