![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjMlcupUtxr__HoNKhjVtOZCvTva3IbiqzbPChzpOw1KZChUGRnvL1vKoN-UizmsSOrbn9-fd49FIAn0lgLwNaIsfkU5qp30NWIZQtXVJfSImnmBKCB-DIq_neOHbjPF4LpeOfBO2dzRlU/s400/stefan_davidovici_dog+dreamS.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj9lST7Fd9_qDkSxiKPLVONg3ESSB4_IlZQYTIVxFeeNFyTGKy9GpfvzY4p1vSp3bAYf-cS4IjXtxws4itANufJlxRF2KWf94ESgtQfJ1muNPUo8TMhE9rkZVGkIEKh_aMvSXJHnZNETRQ/s400/stefan_davidovici_5planetsS.jpg)
The Human Maps start with the dreams of a dog, of course.
:-)
We perceive reality in a complex way that changes over time and combines our direct perceptions with patterns and abstract notions. The way we conceive the architectural space that 'matters' - the one that 'hiddes a story' - is a direct reflection of this complex perception.