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FACULTY (through the French, from the See also: body for particular kinds
of activity, feeling, &c
.
In the early See also: history of psychology the See also: term was applied to various See also: mental processes considered as causes or conditions of the mind—a treatment of " class concepts of mental phenomena as if they were real forces producing these phenomena " (G
.
F
.
Stout, Analytic Psychology, vol. i. p
.
17)
.
In See also: medieval Latin facultas was used to translate Suvaµis in the Aristotelian application of the word to a branch of learning or knowledge, and thus it is particularly applied to the various departments of knowledge as taught in a university and to the body of teachers of the particular See also: art or science taught
.
The See also: principal " faculties " in the medieval See also: universities were See also: theology, See also: canon and See also: civil See also: law, See also: medicine and arts (see UNIVERSITIES)
.
A further extension of this use is to the body of members of any particular profession
.
In law, " faculty " is a See also: dispensation or licence to do that which is not permitted by the See also: common law
.
The word in this sense is used only in ecclesiastical law
.
A faculty maybe granted to be ordained deacon under twenty-three years of age; to hold two livings at once (usually called a licence or dispensation, but granted under the See also: seal of the office of faculties; see See also: BENEFICE); to be married at any place or See also: time (usually called a See also: special licence; see See also: MARRIAGE; LICENCE); to See also: act as a See also: notary public (q.v.)
.
Any alteration in a See also: church, such as an addition or diminution in the fabric or the utensils or ornaments of the church, cannot strictly be made without the legal sanction of the ordinary, which can only be expressed by the issue of a faculty
.
So a faculty would be required for a vault, for the removal of a body, for the purpose of erecting monuments, for alterations in a parsonage See also: house, for brick See also: graves, for the See also: apportionment of a seat, &c
.
Cathedrals, however, are exempt from the See also: necessity for a faculty before making alterations in the fabric, utensils or ornaments
.
The See also: court of faculties is the court of the archbishop for granting faculties
.
It is a court in which there is no litigation or holding of pleas
.
Its chief officer is called the master of faculties, and he is one and the same with the See also: judge of the court of See also: arches
.
Attached to the court of faculties are a registrar and deputy registrars, a chief clerk and record-keeper, and a seal keeper
.
In Scotland the society of See also: advocates of the court of session, and See also: local bodies of legal practitioners, are described as faculties
.
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