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SPECIFICATION (from Med. Lat. specifi...

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Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 617 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SPECIFICATION (from Med.
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Lat. specificatio, specificare, to enumerate or mention in detail)
  , any detailed statement, especially one on which an estimate or plan is based, as the specification of a builder or architect (see
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BUILDING) . In patent law a specification is a description of an invention . An application for a patent must be accompanied by a specification, either provisional or
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complete . If a complete specification does not accompany the application, it must be forwarded usually within six months of the date of application, otherwise the application is deemed to be abandoned . A provisional specification declares the nature of the invention in general terms, while a complete specification describes the invention in detail, and shows the manner in which it is to be carried out (see further
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PATENTS) . In the
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civil law (see AccEssroN) specification was the working up of a thing into a new product; for example, the making of
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bread from grain . The effect of specification was that the
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original owner lost his title in favour of the creator of the new product, but had an
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action for the value of the materials.rigid steel wire or gold frames, with fastening-pieces over the ears; single or double eye-glasses, and hand-glasses, or lorgnettes, being varieties of form, according to the circumstances and the wearer's taste . Preserves.—Preserves are used to conceal deformities or to protect the eyes in the many conditions where they cannot tolerate bright
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light, such as ulceration and inflammation of the cornea, certain diseases of the
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iris, ciliary
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body, choroid, and retina . They are made of bluish, " smoked," or almost black coloured glass, and are of very various shapes, according to the amount of obscuration necessary . Prisms.—Prisms are of
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great value in cases of double vision due to a slight tendency to squinting, caused by weakness or over-action of the
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muscular apparatus of the eyeball . Prisms deflect rays of light towards their bases . Hence, if a prism is placed in front of the eye with its
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base towards the nose, a ray of light falling upon it will be bent inwards, and seem to come from a point farther out from the axis of vision .

Conversely, if the base of the prism is turned towards the

temple, the ray of light will seem to come from a point nearer the axis, and will induce the eye to turn inwards, to converge towards its
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fellow . In cases of myopia or short-sight owing to weakness of the
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internal recti muscles, the eyes in looking at a near
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object, instead of converging, tend to turn outwards, and so double vision results . If a suitable prism is placed in front of the eyes the double vision may be prevented . These prisms may be combined with
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concave lenses, which correct the myopia, or, since a concave lens may be considered as composed of two prisms
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united at their apices, the same effect may be obtained by making the distance between the centres of the concave lenses greater than that between the centres of the pupils . Again, to obviate the necessity for excessive convergence of the eyes so
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common in hypermetropia, the centre of the pupil should be placed outside the centre of the corrective
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convex lenses; these will then act as prisms with their bases inwards . Where, on the other hand, there is no tendency to squinting, care must be taken in selecting
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spectacles that the distances between the centres of the glasses and the centres of the pupils are quite equal, otherwise squinting, or at any
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rate great fatigue, of the eyes may be induced . Spherical Lenses.—Biconcave, biconvex and concavo-convex (meniscus) lenses are employed in ophthalmic practice in the treatment of errors of refraction . Until recently these spherical lenses were numbered in terms of their
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focal length, the inch being used as the unit . Owing principally to differences in the length of the inch in various countries this method had great inconveniences, and now the unit is the refractive power of a lens whose focal length is one metre . This unit is called a " dioptric " (usually written " D") . A lens of twice its strength has a refractive power of 2 D, and a focal length of
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half a metre, and so on . Concave Lenses are used in the treatment of myopia or short-sight .

In this

condition the eye is elongated from before back-wards, so that the retina lies behind the
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principal focus . All
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objects, therefore, which lie beyond a certain point (the conjugate focus of the dioptric
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system of the eye, the far point) are indistinctly seen; rays from them have not the necessary divergence to be focused in the retina, but may obtain it bytheinterposition of suitable concave lenses . Concave lenses should never be used for
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work within the far point; but they may be used in all cases to improve distant vision, and in very short-sighted persons to remove the far point so as to enable
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fine work such as sewing or
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reading to be done at a convenient distance . The weakest pair of concave lenses with which one can read clearly test types at a distance of 18 ft. is the measure of the amount of myopia, and this fully correcting glass may be worn in the slighter forms of short-sight . In higher degrees, where full correction might increase the myopia by inducing a strain of the accommodation, somewhat weaker glasses should be used for near work . In the highest degrees the complete correction may be employed, but lorgnettes are generally preferred, as they can be removed when the eyes become fatigued .

End of Article: SPECIFICATION (from Med. Lat. specificatio, specificare, to enumerate or mention in detail)
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