@inproceedings{Anderson, author = {Anderson, Stanford}, title = {RATIONAL RECONSTRUCTIONS AND ARCHITECTURAL KNOWLEDGE}, editor = {Faschingeder, Kristian and Jormakka, Kari and Korrek, Norbert and Pfeifer, Olaf and Zimmermann, Gerd}, publisher = {Verlag der Bauhaus-Universit{\"a}t}, address = {Weimar}, organization = {Bauhaus-Universit{\"a}t Weimar}, isbn = {978-3-86068-417-7}, doi = {10.25643/bauhaus-universitaet.3053}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:gbv:wim2-20170329-30535}, pages = {14}, abstract = {Stanford Anderson is Professor of History and Architecture and was Head of the Department of Architecture from 1991 through 2004. He was director of MIT's PhD program in History, Theory and Criticism of Architecture, Art and Urban Form from its founding in 1974 to 1991 and in 1995-96. Anderson's research and writing concern architectural theory, early modern architecture in northern Europe, American architecture and urbanism, and epistemology and historiography. He has organized numerous professional conferences and served on the editorial boards of Assemblage, Journal of Architectural Education, Places, and The MIT Press. In addition to numerous articles, his books are Planning for Diversity and Choice, On Streets, and Hermann Muthesius: Style-Architecture and Building Art. He is co-author of Kay Fisker. Peter Behrens and a New Architecture for the Twentieth Century appeared in 2000 and Eladio Dieste: Innovation in Structural Art in 2004. In 1997, The MIT Press published a collection of essays in his honor, edited by Martha Pollak: The Education of the Architect: Historiography, Urbanism, and the Growth of Knowledge. He was a Fulbright fellow at the Technische Hochschule in Munich and subsequently a fellow of the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation and the American Council of Learned Societies. Anderson received his bachelor's degree from the University of Minnesota, his master's in architecture from the University of California at Berkeley, and his doctoral degree in the history of art from Columbia University in New York City.}, subject = {Architekturtheorie}, language = {en} }