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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 155284 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 72 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 7 Plato 6 good 5 platonic 5 man 5 Republic 5 Greek 4 sokratic 4 kai\ 4 Timæus 4 Sokrates 4 Protagoras 4 Phædrus 4 Phædon 4 Gorgias 4 Gods 4 Footnote 4 Athens 4 Aristotle 3 dialogue 3 athenian 3 Xenophon 3 Schleiermacher 3 Parmenides 3 Kosmos 3 Herakleitus 3 Ens 2 thing 2 reason 2 pleasure 2 nature 2 mind 2 grecian 2 great 2 form 2 Theætêtus 2 Stallbaum 2 Sophistês 2 Sophists 2 Socrates 2 Politikus 2 Philêbus 2 Leges 2 Kriton 2 Kritias 2 Homer 2 Hippias 2 Greece 2 God 2 England 2 Empedokles Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 3990 p. 3935 man 2179 side 2114 note 1812 dialogue 1704 thing 1668 mind 1498 n. 1166 doctrine 1156 pleasure 1111 life 1060 time 1020 other 992 knowledge 973 opinion 946 view 922 theory 916 person 850 body 841 part 831 point 817 nature 816 soul 810 footnote 805 name 779 a. 765 word 749 purpose 742 one 741 philosophy 740 question 739 object 735 philosopher 733 reason 731 nothing 727 truth 722 work 720 law 711 sokrate 702 fact 698 case 692 sense 676 power 634 citizen 627 form 619 principle 613 city 603 pain 603 art 598 character Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 14863 _ 7797 Plato 3964 Greek 3377 Footnote 3023 Sokrates 2627 kai\ 1765 s 1396 i. 1247 pp 1190 c. 1122 Aristotle 1078 n 974 Republic 773 n. 770 ii 764 de\ 743 te 731 Protagoras 669 tô 572 pa 566 tou 565 Platonic 545 Xenophon 542 iii 529 De 516 to\ 507 Ens 506 D. 495 me\n 483 le 476 tou= 466 Legg 463 Athens 454 ga\r 443 de 442 Gorgias 439 Gods 435 tê\n 435 et 397 e)n 394 C. 368 iv 368 Timæus 366 ou 347 Parmenides 342 Philêbus 338 Phædrus 337 ô(s 336 E. 327 ê Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 9011 he 8817 it 3803 we 3394 they 2829 them 2768 i 2124 you 2056 him 1684 himself 974 us 938 me 849 itself 543 themselves 271 she 117 myself 115 yourself 98 her 85 ourselves 81 one 44 herself 21 oi 16 theirs 10 thyself 8 his 6 to/ 6 thee 6 je 5 yours 5 mine 4 iv 4 ii 4 hers 4 ce 3 zô 3 ti 2 ye 2 tau 2 oneself 2 o(/soi 2 iii 2 au)= 1 Ænesidêmus)--we 1 yourselves 1 wise:--they 1 win,--he 1 tô=| 1 tô 1 turn[11]--you 1 together.--of 1 schleiermacher[1]--with Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 36539 be 7486 have 3471 do 1835 know 1769 make 1761 say 1556 see 1243 give 1136 find 1026 take 891 call 773 compare 715 think 713 appear 694 become 686 come 658 respect 633 go 629 consider 584 admit 583 bring 552 follow 530 declare 520 believe 518 show 509 put 500 exist 491 accord 467 speak 449 affirm 446 teach 431 require 428 tell 426 produce 420 belong 411 mean 403 assume 402 suppose 391 recognise 384 apply 383 seem 382 describe 382 compose 380 understand 372 pass 371 look 370 stand 366 learn 362 read 358 prove Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 7992 not 2720 other 2111 good 2011 only 1818 so 1798 more 1759 same 1730 such 1643 own 1526 also 1500 well 1450 as 1340 great 1311 first 1201 different 1173 here 1091 most 1045 even 1028 many 990 true 902 much 896 just 876 thus 853 now 839 out 837 very 826 then 780 platonic 681 general 651 up 646 far 645 therefore 631 real 617 less 565 never 520 common 517 bad 502 certain 497 last 482 always 467 still 458 human 435 too 434 second 434 down 433 special 426 little 425 long 411 all 405 false Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 433 good 286 most 201 least 148 great 143 high 91 early 60 bad 53 Most 34 strong 31 low 30 large 24 manif 21 small 21 late 18 pure 18 near 17 fine 16 grave 15 happy 14 wise 14 old 13 full 11 true 10 simple 10 rich 9 wide 9 noble 6 sublime 6 slow 6 poor 6 long 6 deep 6 able 5 severe 4 young 4 warm 4 rare 4 quick 4 eld 4 e 4 clear 3 vague 3 slight 3 short 3 s'' 3 rude 3 heavy 3 grand 3 few 3 fast Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 805 most 48 well 25 least 2 worst 2 highest 1 ê(gei 1 s''est 1 near 1 cleverest 1 -the 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 45 plato does not 35 _ is _ 23 plato did not 18 _ know _ 18 plato is not 17 _ is not 13 sokrates does not 11 knowledge is sensible 11 man is happy 9 _ are _ 9 plato was not 8 _ be _ 8 men do not 8 pleasure is not 8 sokrates is here 8 sokrates is not 7 _ do _ 7 man does evil 7 man does not 7 men are lovers 7 plato has not 7 pleasures are good 7 things are good 6 _ did _ 6 knowledge is not 6 man is just 6 men are so 6 pleasures are bad 5 _ does not 5 man is not 5 men are courageous 5 plato is here 4 _ are not 4 _ be satisfied 4 _ was _ 4 knowledge is dominant 4 life is not 4 man is good 4 men are not 4 men know nothing 4 plato calls knowledge 4 plato follows out 4 plato has here 4 sokrates did not 4 things are always 4 things are full 4 things become beautiful 3 _ appear _ 3 _ doing _ 3 _ has _ Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 14 _ is not _ 4 plato was not merely 2 _ are not _ 2 _ having no essential 2 dialogue is not clear 2 knowledge is not always 2 man does not naturally 2 man is no better 2 others are not compatible 2 plato does not always 2 plato is not always 2 plato is not anxious 2 plato is not satisfied 2 pleasure is no reality 1 _ does not really 1 _ is not assignable 1 _ is not merely 1 aristotle has not fully 1 aristotle is not accurate 1 aristotle was no less 1 c. is not injustice 1 dialogue has not only 1 dialogues are not worthy 1 dialogues do not even 1 dialogues have no other 1 doctrine was not physical 1 doctrines are not such 1 greek is no native 1 knowledge is not attainable 1 knowledge is not sensible 1 life admits no continuity 1 life is not merely 1 life is not subject 1 life is not worth 1 man had no natural 1 man has no consciousness 1 man has no knowledge 1 man is no more 1 man is not better 1 man is not fit 1 man is not happy 1 man is not master 1 man was not fit 1 men are not egotists 1 men are not fools 1 men are not mad 1 men have no genuine 1 men have no real 1 men have no right 1 men is not there A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 6312 author = Emerson, Ralph Waldo title = Representative Men: Seven Lectures date = keywords = Bonaparte; England; Europe; France; God; Goethe; Lord; Montaigne; Napoleon; Plato; Shakspeare; Socrates; Swedenborg; english; genius; good; great; life; like; man; mind; nature; new; power; thing; thought; time; world summary = It is natural to believe in great men. When nature removes a great man, people explore I admire great men of all classes, those who stand for facts, and for The Bible of the learned for twentytwo hundred years, every brisk young man, who says in succession fine Plato, too, like every great man, consumed his own times. man, able to honor, at the same time, the ideal, or laws of the mind, bringing certain things to pass;--the men of talent and action. in the world." "I don''t know how great men you may be," said the Guinea One man appears whose nature is to all men''s eyes Other men say wise things as well as he; only they say a good human fate: but, that this man of men, he who gave to the science of Men give way before such a man generalization, so that men saw in him combined the natural and the id = 40435 author = Grote, George title = Plato and the Other Companions of Sokrates, 3rd ed. Volume 1 date = keywords = Academy; Anaxagoras; Antisthenes; Apology; Aristippus; Aristophanes; Aristotel; Aristotle; Ast; Athens; B.C.; Canon; Cicero; Cyrus; Demetrius; Demokritus; Dialectic; Diogenes; Dionysius; Earth; Empedokles; Ens; Eukleides; Euthyphron; Footnote; Gods; Gorgias; Greece; Greek; Herakleitus; Hermann; Hieron; Hippias; Kallimachus; Kosmos; Kritias; Kriton; Leges; MSS; Megarics; Parmenides; Phædon; Phædrus; Plato; Plutarch; Protagoras; Ptolemy; Pythagoreans; Republic; Schleiermacher; Search; Sensu; Simplikius; Sokrates; Sophists; Theophrastus; Theætêtus; Thrasyllus; Timæus; Ueberweg; Xenophon; Zeller; Zeno; alexandrine; athenian; dialogue; good; grecian; kai\; platonic; sokratic summary = Sokrates; Xenophon; Life of Plato; Platonic Canon; Platonic Xenophon different from Plato and the other Sokratic brethren 212 [Footnote 1: Dionysius of Halikarnassus contrasts Plato with [Greek: [Side-note: Written Sokratic Dialogues--their general character.] [Footnote 24: The account given by Aristotle of Plato''s doctrine of of Eukleides rather than to those of Plato--[Greek: kai\ tê\n me\n Forms such as Manness or Horseness[124] (called by Plato the [Greek: [Side-note: Xenophon different from Plato and the other Sokratic Sokrates say--[Greek: ê)/kousa de/ pote au)tou= kai\ peri\ Sokrates we know nothing about Plato as a man and a citizen, except none of the Sokratic dialogues, either by Plato or the other [Footnote 4: Dikæarchus affirmed that Plato was a compound of Sokrates Aristotle''s words citing Plato''s opinion ([Greek: tou/tô| me\n to the Sokrates of the Platonic dialogues: that is, to Plato employing Plato composed no dialogues at all during the lifetime of Sokrates. id = 40436 author = Grote, George title = Plato and the Other Companions of Sokrates, 3rd ed. Volume 2 date = keywords = Alkib; Alkibiades; Archelaus; Aristotle; Ast; Athens; B.C.; Boeckh; Charm; Charmidês; Euthydêmus; Footnote; Gods; Gorgias; Greek; Hipparchus; Hippias; Homer; Ion; Kalliklês; Kriton; Lachês; Law; Memorabilia; Menon; Minos; Perikles; Phædon; Phædrus; Plato; Protagoras; Republic; Schleiermacher; Sokr._--You; Sokrates; Sophists; Stallbaum; Steinhart; Theagês; Timæus; Xenophontic; athenian; beautiful; cause; dialogue; evil; good; idea; kai\; lysis; man; platonic; sokratic summary = Suggestion by Sokrates--Law is the _good_ opinion of Peculiar view taken by Plato of Good--Evil--Happiness 331 What Plato here calls the knowledge of Good, or Reason--the just [Side-note: Cross-questioning by Sokrates--Other things also [Side-note: Mistake of Sokrates and Plato in dwelling too [Side-note: Suggestion by Sokrates--Law is the _good_ [Side-note: Farther questions by Sokrates--Things heavy and [Side-note: Persons of the dialogue--Sokrates, with Demodokus pleasure and good--between pain and evil--upon which Sokrates [Footnote 12: Plato, Lysis, 213 E: [Greek: skopou=nta kata\ tou\s [Footnote 14: Plato, Lysis 215 B: [Greek: O( de\ mê/ tou deo/menos, answer which Plato ever gives, to the question raised by Sokrates in [Side-note: Doctrine of Sokrates in the Menon--desire of good [Side-note: Questions of Sokrates to Protagoras. [Greek: a)kribologi/a] of Sokrates and Plato was not merely It is possible that to minds like Sokrates and Plato, the idea of [Side-note: In both dialogues the doctrine of Sokrates is id = 40437 author = Grote, George title = Plato and the Other Companions of Sokrates, 3rd ed. Volume 3 date = keywords = Antisthenes; Aristotle; Athens; Cognition; Eleate; Ens; Entia; Eros; Footnote; Gods; Gorgias; Greek; Herakleitus; Ideas; Infinite; Intelligence; Kleitophon; Kosmos; Kratylus; Lysias; Mr.; Multa; Non; Parmenides; Philêbus; Phædon; Phædrus; Plato; Politikus; Protagoras; Protarchus; Republic; Schleiermacher; Sokrates; Sophist; Sophistês; Stallbaum; Subject; Symposion; Theætêtus; Timæus; Unum; Xenophon; art; dialogue; different; form; good; kai\; man; mind; object; platonic; pleasure; reason; sokratic summary = to the present day--Different views of Plato and Aristotle upon it Different views given by Plato in other dialogues 163 Plato''s doctrine--That Non-Ens is nothing more than different from authority of Sokrates, Plato, Xenophon, Æschines, Kebês, [Greek: Platonic Dialogues generally, and have pointed out how much Plato it illustrates my opinion that the different dialogues of Plato [Side-note: Different spirit of Plato in his Dialogues of Search.] Aristotle farther remarks that Plato considered [Greek: tau=ta/ te] (Ideas or Forms) [Greek: ei)=nai, kai\ ta\s ê(mete/ras [Side-note: Different views given by Plato in other dialogues.] [Side-note: Reasoning of Plato about Non-Ens--No predications [Side-note: Plato''s reasoning--compared with the points of view of [Side-note: Different definitions of Ens--by Plato--the [Side-note: Plato''s doctrine--That Non-Ens is nothing more than Plato distinctly recognises here Forms or Ideas [Greek: tô=n The doctrine that pleasure is a [Greek: ge/nesis], Plato cites as [Side-note: Different points of view worked out by Plato in id = 40438 author = Grote, George title = Plato and the Other Companions of Sokrates, 3rd ed. Volume 4 date = keywords = Adeimantus; Anaxagoras; Aristotle; Athens; Commonwealth; Council; Demiurgus; Demokritus; Empedokles; Ens; Epinomis; Footnote; Glaukon; Gods; Gorgias; Greece; Greek; Guardians; Herakleitus; Homer; Idea; Justice; Kosmos; Kritias; Leges; Legg; Legibus; Parmenidês; Philêbus; Phædon; Phædrus; Plato; Politikus; Protagoras; Republic; Sokrates; Sophistês; Sparta; Sun; Temperance; Thrasymachus; Timæus; Treatise; Virtue; Xenophon; Zeus; athenian; attic; compare; form; god; good; grecian; iii; kai\; man; platonic; pleasure; reason; ruler; sokratic summary = Different view taken by Plato in the Republic about Dialectic--and Reasoning of Plato to save his doctrine--That no man commits entire Good of the city: Justice, or each person (man, woman, Plato thus assumes his city, and the individual man forming a [Side-note: Peculiar view of Justice taken by Plato.] [Side-note: Plato recognises the generating principle of minds of the citizens--is a principle affirmed by Plato, not as upheld, by Plato--[Greek: kai\ toiau=ta e(/tera e)n Timai/ô|; No--(affirms Plato) the Gods are good beings, whose nature is [Side-note: Different view taken by Plato in the Republic duty.[193] In regard to Good (Plato tells us) no man is satisfied [Side-note: Secondary and generated Gods--Plato''s of the author for Plato over other Greek philosophers, are [Footnote 20: These other cities are what Plato calls [Greek: ai( [Side-note: General ethical doctrine held by Plato in different views of Plato, iii. [Greek: Me/trion, to/], of Plato, iii. id = 18936 author = Hubbard, Elbert title = Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great - Volume 10 Little Journeys To The Homes Of Great Teachers date = keywords = Alfred; America; Arnold; Benedict; Bishop; Christian; Church; Confucius; Eddy; Egypt; England; Erasmus; Froebel; God; Health; Hypatia; Moses; Mrs.; Negro; New; Plato; Pythagoras; Rome; Science; Sixth; Socrates; Thought; good; great; man summary = All great men love liberty, and no man lives in Moses was a man born to rule--he was a leader of men--and here at of any man, living or dead, is a very great compliment. we behold a great man struggling to benefit humanity by making them man in history who fought for human rights and sought to make men free, in a world of living, striving and dying men and women requires great Confucius is the first man in point of time to proclaim the divinity of service, the brotherhood of man, and the truth that in useful work there order to impress men like these, the man must have taught a very exalted The unit of man''s life is the day, not the month or year, much many great things, but he never said this: "I would have every man poor preparatory school for boys lived his life and did his work. id = 10214 author = Taylor, Thomas title = Introduction to the Philosophy and Writings of Plato date = keywords = Fate; Greek; Parmenides; Phaedrus; Plato; Republic; Timaeus; nature; platonic; principle; soul; thing summary = Of all the dogmas of Plato, that concerning the first principle of things subsistence of the things of which it is the principle or cause. Plato, venerably preserving his ineffable exemption from all things, and energy, a multitude of divine natures, according to Plato, immediately In short, with respect to every thing self-subsistent, the summit this with great propriety; for all divine natures, and such things as gods, but Plato in the second place receiving an all-perfect science of nature, but in the first and most excellent causes of all things, which These forms beheld in divine natures possess a fabricative power, but according to nature or art should be prior to the things produced; but life, intellect, soul, nature and body depending; monads suspended from motive of all bodies; it follows that nature must be the cause of things through this the soul, according to Plato, becomes divine, and in another