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See also: external shape, appearance, configuration of an See also: object, in contradistinction to the See also: matter of which it is composed; thus a speech may contain excellent arguments,—the matter may be See also: good, while the See also: style, grammar, arrangement, the form—is See also: bad
.
The See also: term, with its adjective " formal " and the derived nouns " formality " and " formalism," is hence contemptuously used for that which is superficial, unessential, hypocritical: See also: chap. See also: xxiii. of See also: Matthew's gospel is a classical instance of the distinction between the formalism of the Pharisaic See also: code and genuine See also: religion
.
With this may be compared the popular phrases " good See also: form " and " bad form " applied to behaviour in society: so " format (from the French) is technically used of the shape and See also: size, e.g. of a See also: book (See also: octavo, See also: quarto, &c.) or of a cigarette
.
The word " form " is also applied to certain definite See also: objects: in printing a See also: body of type secured in a See also: chase for printing at one impression (" form " or " forme "); a bench without a back, such as is used in See also: schools (perhaps to be compared with O
.
Fr. s'asseoir en forme, to sit in a See also: row); a See also: mould or shape on or in which an object is manufactured; the lair or See also: nest of a See also: hare
.
From its use in the sense of regulated See also: order comes the application of the term to a class in a school (" See also: sixth form," " fifth form," &c.); this sense has been explained without sufficient ground as due to the idea of all See also: children in the same class sitting on a single form (bench)
.
The word has been used technically in philosophy with various shades of meaning
.
Thus it is used to translate the Platonic L a, stbos, the permanent reality which makes a thing what it is, in contrast with the particulars which are finite and subject to change
.
Whether See also: Plato understood these forms as actually existent apart from all the particular examples, or as being of the nature of immutable See also: physical See also: laws, is matter of discussion
.
For See also: practical purposes See also: Aristotle was the first to distinguish between matter (urn) and form (ethos)
.
To Aristotle matter is the undifferentiated primal See also: element: it is rather that from which things develop (u&roicEiµevov, buvaius) than a thing in itself (Evepyeia)
.
The development of particular things from this germinal matter consists in differentiation, the acquiring of particular forms of which the knowable universe consists (cf
.
See also: CAUSATION for the Aristotelian " formal cause ")
.
The perfection of the form of a thing is its entelechy (Evr€XiXECa) in virtue of which it attains its fullest realization of See also: function (De anima, ii
.
2, y ,/ uiv U)'¼n SWai.us TO b~ a See also: bos EvreXixeta)
.
Thus the entelechy of the body is the soul
.
The origin of the differentiation See also: process is to be sought in a " See also: prime mover " (Trp&rov Kevouv), i.e. pure form entirely See also: separate (xcoprarov) from all matter, eternal, unchangeable, operating not by its own activity but by the impulse which its own absolute existence excites in matter (c5s pc, vov, ob Kwovµ€vov)
.
The Aristotelian conception of form was nominally, though perhaps in most cases unintelligently, adopted by the Scholastics, to whom, however, its origin in the observation of the physical universe was an entirely foreignidea
.
The most remarkable adaptation is probably that of Aquinas, who distinguished the spiritual See also: world with its " subsistent forms" (formae separatae) from the material with its " inherent forms " which exist only in combination with matter
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See also: Bacon, returning to the physical standpoint, maintained that all true research must be devoted to the
See also: discovery of the real nature or essence of things
.
His induction searches for the true " form " of See also: light, heat and so forth, analysing the external " form " given in perception into simpler " forms " and their " differences." Thus he would collect all possible instances of hot things, and discover that which is See also: present in all, excluding all those qualities which belong accidentally to one or more of the examples investigated: the " form " of heat is the residuum See also: common to all
.
See also: Kant transferred the term from the See also: objective to the subjective sphere
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All perception is necessarily conditioned by pure "forms of sensibility," i.e. space and See also: time: whatever is perceived is perceived as having See also: special and temporal relations (see SPACE AND TIME; KANT)
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