Physical and Virtual Space

Architects have always wanted to see what the city would look like in the near or distant future. To do that, they have been simulating parts of cities or even whole cities. New devices such as computers have made the exploration of these spaces possible. Freed from physical reality, the virtual space opens unimaginable possibilities. Utopian representations may contain fragments of space, twisted networked surfaces, transparent broken structures, and strange structures evoking any number of associations. This space is not a dream-like, it observes strict limitations defined by precise axioms. Should the created system prove unbalanced, it would be added attractors which would restore the regular distribution and production of natural phenomena. Like all utopian visions, this new reality does not include the man. It may suggest that the man will immerse himself into this space, rather than walk it. The next will be for him to transform into a protein jelly and travel space by means of annihilation and a number of projections. If he should relinquish any physical movement, then it will no longer be his body, but his sensations that will travel through the optic fibres.