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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 8 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 47782 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 65 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 God 4 life 3 world 3 Mr. 3 Kant 3 Hegel 3 English 2 thing 2 nature 2 mind 2 man 2 experience 2 christian 2 american 2 Paris 2 London 2 Locke 2 France 2 England 2 Descartes 2 Comte 2 Christianity 2 Bradley 2 Bergson 1 year 1 way 1 time 1 scripture 1 religion 1 relation 1 reality 1 political 1 philosophy 1 like 1 les 1 infinite 1 idea 1 great 1 good 1 german 1 form 1 footnote 1 fact 1 des 1 day 1 catholic 1 activity 1 absolute 1 William 1 Wilkes Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1175 man 828 world 827 life 757 thing 609 time 597 nature 567 experience 561 mind 527 religion 520 philosophy 496 fact 441 idea 414 sense 402 part 390 thought 388 way 368 reason 363 work 351 year 340 relation 338 nothing 337 history 332 truth 330 form 315 view 314 point 309 word 309 consciousness 306 self 302 knowledge 294 one 288 science 279 system 277 reality 273 universe 264 principle 261 movement 259 book 256 law 252 matter 249 object 245 spirit 245 body 245 age 239 soul 239 power 229 question 227 theory 223 day 217 philosopher Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 3920 _ 696 God 546 de 405 la 276 M. 243 Kant 241 Paris 240 Church 219 et 216 Jesus 210 Mr. 207 Holbach 193 Christianity 177 le 176 des 163 Hegel 163 England 161 Bergson 154 London 140 du 138 English 133 Christ 132 pp 130 à 129 Locke 126 B. 121 que 112 les 105 France 100 Sir 100 New 98 Nature 91 Schleiermacher 84 un 84 Shelley 81 ou 81 Voltaire 81 Fechner 80 Bradley 78 Spinoza 77 Hume 75 Descartes 74 Vol 68 Diderot 67 Oxford 67 Newman 67 Christian 66 sur 66 est 66 James Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 5062 it 2545 he 1933 we 1526 i 1497 they 918 them 696 you 681 us 646 him 487 itself 306 himself 264 me 239 themselves 167 one 111 ourselves 87 she 73 myself 39 her 20 yourself 20 oneself 17 thee 15 ours 13 herself 10 mine 9 je 7 thyself 7 his 5 theirs 4 yourselves 4 yours 2 hers 1 ye 1 whosoever 1 s 1 effected?--nay 1 au Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 16030 be 4569 have 1170 do 906 make 811 say 559 know 527 give 517 take 448 call 440 find 431 come 425 seem 418 think 389 see 307 become 290 feel 285 go 243 exist 222 live 212 mean 204 write 203 follow 197 speak 191 leave 188 bring 185 believe 183 begin 180 appear 179 show 178 suppose 174 hold 166 understand 163 remain 162 pass 158 prove 157 get 155 use 147 bear 146 set 138 tell 134 accord 133 conceive 127 publish 126 stand 123 concern 122 put 121 turn 119 lie 118 consider 115 work Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2888 not 1150 so 1015 more 953 only 794 other 633 great 558 own 554 very 503 most 493 such 481 same 466 even 449 then 442 first 413 much 401 as 393 well 386 now 370 good 362 far 361 new 347 also 339 human 331 never 322 many 320 true 295 here 293 moral 285 religious 284 absolute 272 thus 267 whole 267 long 263 up 260 however 255 less 250 out 241 all 235 rather 232 still 231 natural 229 certain 228 ever 225 always 218 indeed 211 real 209 little 205 possible 205 just 202 high Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 148 least 124 most 93 good 71 great 60 high 21 early 18 late 15 Most 13 large 11 manif 11 bad 10 deep 9 strong 8 simple 8 able 7 small 7 noble 7 full 6 wise 6 true 6 slight 5 low 5 fine 4 pure 4 near 4 e 4 close 3 wide 3 subtle 3 fair 3 divine 2 young 2 vague 2 strange 2 s'' 2 nice 2 narrow 2 minute 2 mere 2 lofty 2 l 2 fit 2 easy 2 clear 2 broad 2 bold 1 weighty 1 weak 1 vivid 1 vile Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 379 most 20 least 7 well 1 profoundest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/34283/34283-h/34283-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/34283/34283-h.zip Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 1 ccx074@coventry.ac.uk Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 25 _ is _ 15 _ are _ 5 _ be _ 5 god is not 5 life is not 5 things are not 4 _ mean _ 4 men have always 4 nothing is more 4 time is not 3 _ be true 3 _ being _ 3 _ doing _ 3 _ felt _ 3 experience is not 3 ideas are not 3 ideas were not 3 man is not 3 mind is not 3 world is not 2 _ appear _ 2 _ does n''t 2 _ exists _ 2 _ is not 2 _ know _ 2 _ take _ 2 _ was _ 2 fact is not 2 life are not 2 life is death 2 man became participant 2 man has ever 2 man is certainly 2 men did not 2 men had never 2 nature is always 2 nature is not 2 nature is only 2 nature was not 2 nothing is less 2 philosophy is not 2 relations are as 2 relations are just 2 religion has not 2 religion is not 2 religion was not 2 sense is not 2 thing is not 2 thought are not 2 time is real Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ has no retribution 1 _ is no easy 1 _ is no longer 1 _ is not new 1 _ is not things 1 experience are not real 1 fact is not derogatory 1 facts are not mere 1 god is no god 1 god is not heart 1 god is not personal 1 god was not far 1 ideas are not mirrors 1 ideas were not explicit 1 ideas were not logical 1 ideas were not only 1 life are not divine 1 life is not moral 1 life were not practical 1 man has no faculty 1 man has no reason 1 man is not merely 1 men do not always 1 men were no more 1 mind has no power 1 mind is not inconceivable 1 minds are no mere 1 minds do not altogether 1 minds found no difficulty 1 nature are not repetitions 1 nature is not mere 1 nature is not more 1 nature was not merely 1 nature were no finer 1 nothing is no violent 1 parts have no identity 1 parts have no worth 1 philosophy has not always 1 philosophy is no more 1 philosophy is not genuine 1 philosophy made no real 1 philosophy was no more 1 reason is not faith 1 reason knows no compromise 1 relations are not _ 1 relations is not _ 1 religion has no more 1 religion was not mainly 1 sense is not more 1 senses are no judge A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 9996 author = Adams, Charles Francis title = "''Tis Sixty Years Since" Address of Charles Francis Adams; Founders'' Day, January 16, 1913 date = keywords = Carolina; Constitution; Massachusetts; South; States; United; american; day; political; year summary = begins, the day the young man passes the threshold of the institution of consider the all-absorbing mid-century political issue, that involving existing in the United States, presented a problem as nearly, to his Passing rapidly on, I come to the next political issue which presented possible words, I may say that in our national growth up to the year as natural conditions warrant and demand, has worked out its results; thirty years, I confidently submit that in the production of the results resulted in all those far-reaching changes suggested in the earlier part of what I have said to-day, as respects our ideals, our political more." The day of individualism as it existed in the American ideal of Democracy, as it is called, is to-day the great panacea,--the political Seven years is, I am aware, under our political system, an unusual term; experience stretching over sixty years,--the results of such observation id = 34283 author = Benn, Alfred William title = History of Modern Philosophy date = keywords = Aristotle; Bacon; Berkeley; Bruno; Comte; Descartes; English; Fichte; God; Hegel; Hume; Kant; Leibniz; Locke; Philosophy; Plato; Spinoza; german summary = philosophy made no real advance; no essentially new ideas about the constitution of nature, the workings of mind, or the ends of life were put the credit of Matter or Power at the expense of Form or Act. The first to draw these revolutionary inferences from the Copernican theory created by Athenian philosophy for the humanistic studies of law, morality, ascribed in Aristotle''s philosophy to the two great categories of Power and great triumph for science, his philosophy demands a reason why the quantity By space and time Kant does not mean the abstract ideas of coexistence and philosophy of Pure Reason adopts from contemporary French thought as the work, the development of philosophy under Kant''s German successors. infinite time is not a personal God, but that moral order of the world Philosophical Sciences_, in 1817, and a _Philosophy of Law_--which is The great idea of Comte''s life, that the positive sciences, philosophically id = 5621 author = Cushing, Max Pearson title = Baron d''Holbach : a Study of Eighteenth Century Radicalism in France date = keywords = Amsterdam; Baron; Diderot; French; Holbach; London; Londres; Mme; Naigeon; Nature; Paris; Système; Vol; Voltaire; Wilkes; des; les summary = Diderot''s Works, Paris, 1821, Vol. XII p. (Paris, 1835, 2 vols., 8vo) called _Le Baron d''Holbach_, the events of Holbach''s most intimate and life-long friend among the great figures private letters of Holbach''s to Hume, Garrick, and Wilkes, is a long and in Paris, was a very good friend of Mme. Holbach and Mlle. Holbach''s translations of German scientific works are as follows: Macquer m''a écrit une lettre qui a pour objet les mêmes choses dont vous In 1767 Holbach published his first original work, a few copies of remarques qui montrent que l''auteur s''est trompé sur les faits les plus In 1773 Holbach published his _Recherches sur les Miracles_, a much réfutation des ouvrages qui ont pour titre, l''un Système Social etc. une lettre à l''auteur du _Système de la Nature_ par un homme du for Holbach''s English friends mentioned in his letters to id = 11984 author = James, William title = A Pluralistic Universe Hibbert Lectures at Manchester College on the Present Situation in Philosophy date = keywords = Bergson; Bradley; Fechner; God; Hegel; Kant; LECTURE; Mr.; Professor; Royce; absolute; activity; experience; fact; footnote; form; life; reality; relation; thing; way; world summary = as an absolute mind that makes the partial facts by thinking them, a finite thing, to be an object for the absolute; and on the part of we use the word ''content'' here, we see that the absolute and the world The absolute and the world are one fact, I said, when materially world, that the philosophy of the absolute, so far as insight and supposed world of absolute reality is asserted both by Bradley and terms of the pluralistic vision of things far more naturally than in reason in things which makes certain combinations logically will have been in point of fact the sort of world which the absolute finite, the whole of reality (the absolute idea, as Hegel calls it) is insulators in logic as much as they like, but in life distinct things whole finite universe each real thing proves to be many differents when things are taken in their absolute reality. id = 15780 author = Moore, Edward Caldwell title = An Outline of the History of Christian Thought Since Kant date = keywords = Arnold; Christianity; Church; Comte; England; English; France; Germany; God; Hegel; Jesus; Kant; New; Newman; Oxford; Paul; Ritschl; Roman; Schleiermacher; Strauss; Testament; christian; life; religion; scripture summary = the thoughts which the men of the age would naturally have concerning nature, the new feeling concerning man, the vast complex of facts and religion whose God is not the principle of all life and nature and for some sense, all men are sons of God and Jesus was the son of man. Christ is for living religion now a man, now God, revelation now nature the Son of God, and mankind and Jesus are thought of as parts of all men is the basis of morality, just as the oneness of man with God is of a man''s nature and life by the action of the spirit of God, great revelation and source of inference concerning the nature of God. Instead of saying in the famous phrase, that the Christians think of views of the relation of God to man and the world held the field, id = 16712 author = Santayana, George title = Some Turns of Thought in Modern Philosophy: Five Essays date = keywords = Benda; Bradley; God; Locke; experience; idea; infinite; life; mind; nature; world summary = ignorant of the natural causes which have imposed them on the animal mind, Resting on these clear perceptions, the natural philosophy of Locke falls These two parts of Locke''s natural philosophy, however, are not in perfect the same time, the manner in which the moral world rests upon the natural, mind were at the same time aware that those things did not exist, His moral insight simply vivifies the scene that nature and the sciences finding its natural joy in a new way of life. moral values, the terms of human knowledge were not drawn from the objects As to the soul, which might exist without thinking, Locke still called it experiences _in vacuo_ that led common sense to assume a material world, self-existing world, social and psychological, if not material: and they material world, and is part of the same natural event as the movement of id = 17771 author = Santayana, George title = Winds Of Doctrine: Studies in Contemporary Opinion date = keywords = Bergson; Christianity; God; James; Mr.; Russell; Shelley; William; american; catholic; christian; good; life; like; man; mind; nature; philosophy; thing; world summary = animal nature and inspiring to our hearts, something which, like every The whole drift of things presents a huge, good-natured comedy to the forms of life and feeling, to appreciate exotic arts and religions, turn one''s heart and mind away from a corrupt world; it was a summons would have wished him to be, the existent ideal of human nature and continuity of moral traditions; they wish the poetry of life to flow believe that life is not a natural expression of material being, but consciousness of things in general reveals the mind of that man rather mind, truth, person--life is shut out of your heart. existing world to discover, and each thought it possible that its view life, that might perhaps justify its existence; like a philosopher at remains possible merely; so that nothing can ever exist in nature or this moral emphasis in the eternal; nature exists for no reason; and, id = 2445 author = Voltaire title = Letters on England date = keywords = Charles; Descartes; England; English; France; God; Isaac; King; LETTER; London; Lord; Mr.; Newton; Paris; Quaker; Sir; great; man; time summary = In a little time a great number of these savages (falsely so called), enlighten our own mind and that of others, a man like Sir Isaac Newton, whose equal is hardly found in a thousand years, is the truly great man. Keeper, and himself was a great many years Lord Chancellor under King Before his time, several great philosophers had declared, in study of philosophy, whilst the great Galileo, at fourscore years of age, a God, in matter, in the laws of motion, and in the nature of light. Sir Isaac Newton, seems to have destroyed all these great and little time Sir Isaac Newton, being then twenty-three years of age, had invented It appeared in general to Sir Isaac that the world was five hundred years at the same time that some very great philosophers attacked Sir Isaac it was in his first satires, at a time when the taste of that great poet