Le Corbusier’s urban planning theory did not only address the remarkable shift in his career path by engaging human psychology and a natural orientation in his design, but also it marked the new expectation regarding the revision of Modernity by following a Syndicalist perspective. In contrast to the rules of Capitalism and its planning, the historian Peter Sterns delineates three major points of syndicalism : complete hostility to the existing capitalist order ; a belief that economic rather than political means - notably the general strike - was the only successful way to attack this system ; and a vague conception of a future society with a decentralized power structure organized into local economic units directed by the producers themselves. The vagueness of the objectives was intentional : syndicalist action was to be the result of practical experience, an immediate, pragmatic response to the needs of the moment rather than an impression of a pre-established social theory or plan.28 Therefore, all the practices and the master plans Le Corbusier tried to achieve with various regions were proof of his ideal that the Modern Movement had a larger definition and could possibly solve the broken functions of society through an architecture inspired by utopian socialism.