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XXVII.—Morphology and Mathematics.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2012

Extract

The study of Organic Form, which we call by Goethe's name of Morphology, is but a portion of that wider Science of Form which deals with the forms assumed by matter under all aspects and conditions, and, in a still wider sense, with Forms which are theoretically imaginable.

The study of Form may be descriptive merely, or it may become analytical. We begin by describing the shape of an object in the simple words of common speech: we end by defining it in the precise language of mathematics; and the one method tends to follow the other in strict scientific order and historical continuity.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1916

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References

page 861 note * Historia Animalium, i, 1.

page 872 note * Les quatres livres d'Albert Dürer de la proportion des parties et pourtraicts des corps humains, Arnheim, 1613, folio (and earlier editions). Cf. also Lavater, , Essays on Physiognomy, 1799, vol. iii, p. 271.Google Scholar

page 882 note * Dinosaurs of North America, 1896, pl. lxxxi, etc.

page 888 note * Mem. Amer. Mus. of Nat. Hist., i, iii, 1898.