philosophers have been largely indifferent to questions about their own means of expression. It is as though they had tacitly established a distinc- tion between form and matter, and had also asserted an order of priority between them: the "matter" was what they would deal with-the form of its expression being an accidental feature of the acts of conception and communication. To be sure, there is a method, or at least a dogma, behind this inclination.
CITATION STYLE
Lang, B. (1975). Space, Time, and Philosophical Style. Critical Inquiry, 2(2), 263–280. https://doi.org/10.1086/447839
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