Camillo was a transitional figure standing at the exact point where the art of memory was ceasing to be purely internal and beginning to imagine itself as external. The Memory Theater was a memory palace turned inside out — a building you could walk into physically rather than one you walked through mentally. The externalization had begun, fifty years after Gutenberg, and Camillo was its most literal embodiment.
What Camillo was attempting was not rejection of print but supplementation of it. The theater would preserve, in external form, precisely the quality the printed book could not carry: the architectural organization of knowledge, the spatial relationships between ideas, the simultaneous availability of an entire domain. It combined the permanence of print with the spatial qualities of the palace. The project was magnificently ambitious and fatally compromised: the theater externalized the architecture but could not externalize the inhabitation that gave the architecture its generative power.
The theater failed. Camillo died with it unfinished, having received funding from Francis I of France and accumulated reputation as a charlatan alongside recognition as a genius. But the manner of his failure illuminates the present with uncanny precision. Every attempt to build a physical external structure that makes the benefits of internalized knowledge available without the internalization — every attempt to skip the labor of palace-building — runs into the same structural problem. The building can hold the images. Only the builder can hold the understanding.
Camillo was a professor of modest scholarly reputation who caught the attention of the French court. Francis I commissioned the Theater's construction. What survives of the project is primarily Camillo's own description in L'Idea del Theatro, published posthumously in 1550, along with contemporaneous accounts by visitors who saw partial versions.
Mens artificialis. The explicit phrase — artificial mind — for a physical structure designed to provide cognitive capability exceeding individual human memory, coined 1530s.
Externalized architecture. The theater made the palace walkable as physical space, inverting the internal-to-external relationship that had defined trained memory for two millennia.
Cosmic organization. The theater's structure encoded Hermetic assumptions about the correspondence between mind and cosmos — knowledge as microcosm of universal structure.
Ambition without completion. The project was never finished, paralleling the structural tension between what external architecture can carry and what it cannot.
Precursor to the digital palace. Camillo's aspiration — total knowledge in navigable external form — is recognizably the aspiration of contemporary AI, advanced by five centuries.