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When the proportions of architectural composition are applied to a particular building, the two-termed relationship of the parts to the whole must be harmonized with a third term—the observer, who not only sees the proportions of a door and their relationship to those of a wall (as would be seen in a drawing of the building) but measures them against his or her own dimensions. This three-termed relationship is called scale. A well-scaled building such as a Greek temple will serve for illustration. If it were to be magnified to the size of St. Peter’s in Rome, with its proportions ...(100 of 24717 words)