When describing the bodily experience of the Parc de la Villette (or within any other structure) there is a fundamental understanding
that an experience is basically the perception of how one’s body is interacting with other bodies within the same space. There is also
an assumption that there is no link between the perception and the action, and that both are mutually exclusive. Further, models of
thought have concluded that consciousness of the body arises through interaction of the world at the same time that consciousness
of the world arises through the medium of the body (Merleau Ponty, 1962). In other words, much like the popular catch phrase of
television psychologist Dr. Phil, ‘there is no reality, only perception’, and only by having this awareness, can one fully begin to understand
La Villette from an objectionable vantage point of a single frame of reference.