operator formalism - meaning and definition. What is operator formalism
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What (who) is operator formalism - definition

POSITIVE OR DESCRIPTIVE THEORY OF ADJUDICATION
Formalism (law); Democratic formalism

Formalism (art)         
STUDY OF ART BY ANALYZING AND COMPARING FORM AND STYLE
Formalism in Art; Formal analysis; Aesthetic formalism; Formalism in art
In art history, formalism is the study of art by analyzing and comparing form and style. Its discussion also includes the way objects are made and their purely visual or material aspects.
Formalism (music)         
MUSIC TERM; CONCEPT THAT A COMPOSITION'S MEANING IS ENTIRELY DETERMINED BY ITS FORM
Formalism in music
In music theory and especially in the branch of study called the aesthetics of music, formalism is the concept that a composition's meaning is entirely determined by its form.
Transfer operator         
PUSHFORWARD ON THE SPACE OF MEASURABLE FUNCTIONS
Ruelle operator; Perron-Frobenius operator; Perron-Frobenius Operator; Frobenius-Perron operator; Bernoulli operator; Ruelle-Frobenius-Perron operator; Frobenius–Perron operator; Perron–Frobenius operator
In mathematics, the transfer operator encodes information about an iterated map and is frequently used to study the behavior of dynamical systems, statistical mechanics, quantum chaos and fractals. In all usual cases, the largest eigenvalue is 1, and the corresponding eigenvector is the invariant measure of the system.

Wikipedia

Legal formalism

Legal formalism is both a descriptive theory and a normative theory of how judges should decide cases. In its descriptive sense, formalists maintain that judges reach their decisions by applying uncontroversial principles to the facts; formalists believe that there is an underlying logic to the many legal principles that may be applied in different cases. These principles, they claim, are straightforward and can be readily discovered by anyone with some legal expertise. Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., by contrast, believed that "The life of the law has not been logic: it has been experience". The formalist era is generally viewed as having existed from the 1870s to the 1920s, but some scholars deny that legal formalism ever existed in practice.

The ultimate goal of legal formalism would be to describe the underlying principles in a single and determinate system that could be applied mechanically—from which the term "mechanical jurisprudence" comes. The antithesis of formalism is legal realism, which has been said to be "[p]erhaps the most pervasive and accepted theory of how judges arrive at legal decisions."

This descriptive conception of "legal formalism" can be extended to a normative theory, which holds that judges should decide cases by the application of uncontroversial principles to the facts; "sound legal decisions can be justified as the conclusions of valid deductive syllogisms."