I asked this two months ago in MSE, but nobody answered, so I hope it will be suitable here.
A homogenious polynomial of degree $k\in{\Bbb N}$ on a finite dimensional vector space $X$ over $\Bbb R$ is a polynomial $f:X\to{\Bbb R}$ satisfying the identity $$ f(\lambda\cdot x)=\lambda^k\cdot f(x),\qquad x\in X,\quad \lambda\in{\Bbb R} $$ It is known that the formulas $$ f(x)=\alpha(x,...,x),\qquad x\in X, $$ $$ \alpha(x_1,...,x_k)=\frac{1}{k!}\cdot\frac{\partial}{\partial \lambda_k}... \frac{\partial}{\partial \lambda_1} f(\lambda_1\cdot x_1+...+\lambda_k\cdot x_k)\Big|_{\lambda_i=0},\qquad x_i\in X, $$ establish a bijection between homogenious polynomials $f:X\to{\Bbb R}$ of degree $k$ on $X$ and symmetric polylinear forms $\alpha:X^k\to{\Bbb R}$. (As far as I understand, the last formula here is called polarization.)
In the special case, when $k=2$ we can, first, define homogenious polynomial as a quadratic form, i.e. a polynomial $f:X\to{\Bbb R}$ satisfying the parallelogram identity, $$ \frac{f(x+y)+f(x-y)}{2}=f(x)+f(y),\qquad x,y\in X, $$ and, second, replace the (analytic) polarisation formula by the purely algebraic formula $$ \alpha(x,y)=\frac{f(x+y)-f(x)-f(y)}{2},\qquad x,y\in X. $$
My question:
What are the analogs of the last two identities in higher degrees (when $k>2$)?
In other words, which identities characterize homogenious polynomials $f$ of degrees 3, 4,..., instead of the homogenity condition, and which (algebraic) identities can be used for expressing $\alpha$ instead of the (analytic) polarization formula?