In opposition to the understanding of architecture as taxonomia, [or a habit of classifying ~and naming~ things], there exists an organic diagramme of forces: a mechanical-animal amongst the actualities of the architectural profession and the virtual-actualities of thinking about architecture. On the one hand, the building - a 'decomposition of bending moments or of flexions where numerical division is only the condition of morphogenetic movements'. On the other, the formation of an organism 'increasingly probable and natural when an infinity of intermediate states is given'. A multiplicity of connections may be formed in multiple ways, compounded at each stage. It is here, if ever, that a theory of architecture becomes tenable. In the principle of connectivity, a mathesis - by itself a flexical process. The data-space presented here is just a representation of our diagramme.