Philosophy Dictionary of Arguments

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 J. Bigelow - Philosophy Dictionary of Arguments
 
Form, philosophy: A. Form traditionally is an antonym of matter or content. Form is the structure or arrangement of something. It is the way that something is organized or composed. Form can be found in art, music, literature, architecture, nature and language. See also statue/clay, exterior/interior, Wholes, Parts, Dualism, Substance, Substrate, Change, Process. B. In logic it comes to the form in which statements must be expressed in order to allow conclusions. See also Fine-grained/coarse-grained, Completeness, Theories, Systems, Formalism.
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Annotation: The above characterizations of concepts are neither definitions nor exhausting presentations of problems related to them. Instead, they are intended to give a short introduction to the contributions below. – Lexicon of Arguments.
 
Author Item    More concepts for author
Adorno, Th.W. Forms   Adorno
Baudrillard, Jean Forms   Baudrillard
Bigelow, John Forms   Bigelow
Black, Max Forms   Black
Bourdieu, Pierre Forms   Bourdieu
Chomsky, Noam Forms   Chomsky
Cuvier, Georges Forms   Cuvier
Dennett, Daniel Forms   Dennett
Eco, Umberto Forms   Eco
Gärdenfors, Peter Forms   Gärdenfors
Gould, Stephen Jay Forms   Gould
Habermas, Jürgen Forms   Habermas
Hegel, G.W.F. Forms   Hegel
Kant, Immanuel Forms   Kant
Luhmann, Niklas Forms   Luhmann
Lyons, John Forms   Lyons
Pinker, Steven Forms   Pinker
Quine, W.V.O. Forms   Quine
Saussure, Ferdinand de Forms   Saussure
Schröter, Karl Forms   Schröter
Thiel, Christian Forms   Thiel
Wittgenstein, Ludwig Forms   Wittgenstein

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