Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 3 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 47273 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 68 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 line 2 illustration 2 circle 1 water 1 time 1 square 1 proposition 1 perpetual 1 motion 1 geometry 1 equal 1 angle 1 american 1 William 1 THEOREM 1 Sir 1 Pythagoras 1 Proclus 1 Plato 1 Mr. 1 Morgan 1 London 1 Greek 1 GEOMETRY 1 Fig 1 Euclid 1 Book 1 Bible 1 B.C. 1 Archimedes 1 A.D. Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 633 line 611 geometry 482 angle 432 proposition 353 circle 332 point 322 time 302 side 291 plane 270 triangle 260 illustration 244 work 240 pupil 238 figure 212 case 201 teacher 195 number 185 proof 178 problem 174 one 172 subject 166 definition 153 part 133 word 132 area 131 school 131 form 131 class 127 book 125 motion 125 fact 120 year 115 way 112 method 112 century 109 theorem 109 mathematic 106 value 106 thing 105 square 102 term 101 result 101 polygon 98 use 96 application 95 ratio 93 idea 93 day 92 textbook 92 surface Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 4079 _ 267 Euclid 101 THEOREM 93 AB 82 b 82 Book 64 Fig 63 Proclus 62 B.C. 58 A 57 P 54 x 54 B 50 c 47 De 47 A.D. 43 Greek 41 C 40 Pythagoras 40 O 39 Mr. 38 Sir 38 + 36 ca 35 AC 34 Morgan 33 y 33 Plato 32 London 31 Professor 31 Archimedes 30 M. 29 W. 29 New 29 BC 28 England 27 Latin 27 II 26 York 26 Elements 26 America 25 Aristotle 24 X 24 Bible 23 r 23 Mathematics 23 IV 23 ABC 22 | 22 v Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 1786 it 705 we 549 he 405 they 185 them 161 i 129 us 102 him 52 itself 36 themselves 29 himself 26 you 26 she 22 me 21 one 16 ourselves 6 her 5 myself 4 thee 3 ours 2 herself 1 yours 1 pouch 1 oneself 1 elias 1 ay Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 6677 be 1486 have 468 give 426 make 334 do 273 find 264 use 248 say 229 know 210 follow 206 take 189 show 189 see 176 prove 152 call 123 seem 112 draw 110 require 107 write 107 consider 103 come 102 measure 93 state 93 form 92 go 91 cut 88 define 84 become 80 teach 79 lead 78 let 76 mean 75 study 74 suggest 74 contain 74 appear 72 bring 71 produce 70 think 69 relate 69 place 67 move 65 pass 64 construct 63 suppose 63 speak 62 tell 61 include 59 describe 58 fall Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 824 not 336 other 312 so 311 equal 300 more 266 then 264 same 237 great 231 well 216 very 211 only 209 straight 208 such 195 also 193 first 192 most 168 therefore 165 however 165 as 163 now 155 good 154 many 146 thus 139 much 139 even 134 right 118 simple 113 little 113 certain 104 general 101 easily 100 out 96 few 95 perpetual 94 here 93 common 92 up 92 interesting 90 modern 89 regular 89 practical 89 long 86 possible 85 high 82 solid 81 similar 78 small 78 far 77 second 77 less Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 61 most 58 good 27 great 26 least 13 short 12 simple 8 early 8 Most 7 late 7 high 5 small 5 slight 5 fine 4 old 3 large 3 able 2 pure 2 easy 2 alkah 1 wild 1 wide 1 weak 1 sane 1 near 1 manif 1 long 1 full 1 fierce 1 faint 1 clear 1 MOST Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 131 most 11 well 8 least Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 17 angles are equal 12 triangles are congruent 10 geometry is not 8 one are equal 6 euclid did not 5 proposition is not 4 _ are parallel 4 _ is || 4 definition is not 4 triangle are equal 4 triangle is equal 3 _ are congruent 3 _ is _ 3 _ is parallel 3 angle is equal 3 euclid does not 3 line is perpendicular 3 lines are parallel 3 proof is too 3 triangle are concurrent 2 _ are similar 2 _ does not 2 _ is perpendicular 2 cases are not 2 circle is equal 2 euclid was not 2 figure is not 2 form is easier 2 geometry are not 2 geometry does not 2 line is not 2 lines are equal 2 lines have breadth 2 plane are parallel 2 plane is perpendicular 2 planes are perpendicular 2 problem is impossible 2 problem is not 2 proof is not 2 proof is so 2 proposition is practically 2 proposition was first 2 propositions are not 2 propositions are usually 2 sides are equal 2 time goes on 2 triangle are unequal 2 triangle is greater 2 triangles are similar 1 _ are cubes Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 cases are not liable 1 cases are not parallel 1 definition is not entirely 1 definition is not exactly 1 definition is not satisfactory 1 definition makes no assertion 1 definitions are not always 1 euclid had no algebra 1 euclid was not interested 1 figure are not so 1 figure is not uncommon 1 figures have no particularly 1 geometry are not prepared 1 geometry is not mere 1 geometry is not rigorous 1 geometry is not so 1 geometry was not seriously 1 line is not distance 1 line is not very 1 lines have no extremities 1 number is no more 1 problem is not real 1 problem is not so 1 problems are not only 1 proof is not so 1 proof requiring no more 1 proposition is not wise 1 propositions are not ancient 1 pupil is not ready A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 36547 author = Phin, John title = The Seven Follies of Science [2nd ed.] A popular account of the most famous scientific impossibilities and the attempts which have been made to solve them. To which is added a small budget of interesting paradoxes, illusions, and marvels date = keywords = Archimedes; Bible; Fig; London; Morgan; Mr.; Sir; William; circle; illustration; line; motion; perpetual; square; time; water summary = unfortunate fact that the circle-squarer and the perpetual-motion-seeker machines and contrivances for obtaining perpetual motion, and of explained as the drawing of a square inside a circle and at other times quadrature, by which a square, equal in area to a given circle, is times the ratio accepted by mechanics in general was determined by given by the following method: Divide the diameter into 7 equal parts by circumference: Inscribe in the given circle a square, and to three times cut out of sheet metal a circle 10 inches in diameter, and a square of This problem is not so generally known as that of squaring the circle, "a wheel supposed to be capable of producing a perpetual motion; the "''Father, I have invented a perpetual motion!'' said a little fellow perpetual motion machine one of the scientific impossibilities? then asked if the philosophic work cost much or required long time, id = 26752 author = Ramus, Petrus title = The Way To Geometry date = keywords = GEOMETRY summary = THE WAY GEOMETRY. Being necessary and usefull, Astronomers. Engineres. Geographers. Architecks. Land-meaters. Carpenters. Sea-men. Paynters. Carvers, &c. Written by Peter Ramus Translated by William Bedwell Note from submitter: Because of the heavy dependence of this book on its diagrams and illustrations, a text version was not prepared. id = 37681 author = Smith, David Eugene title = The Teaching of Geometry date = keywords = A.D.; B.C.; Book; Euclid; Greek; Plato; Proclus; Pythagoras; THEOREM; american; angle; circle; equal; geometry; illustration; line; proposition summary = from geometry as from any other subject of study,--given teachers of for the general case that the sum of the angles of a triangle equals two perpendicular to a line, and how to make an angle equal to a given In his work Euclid placed all of the leading propositions of plane special points and lines relating to the triangle and the circle, and propositions; in other words, to write a textbook on plane geometry. In the proof of the early propositions of plane geometry, and again at point, a straight line, and a circle exists, he practically postulates Euclid stated the proposition thus, "If in a triangle two angles be the proposition that, if alternate angles are equal, the lines are parallels, and we get the figure of plane geometry relating to lines the circle as a line is becoming quite general in elementary geometry,