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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 90979 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 68 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 St. 3 Pope 3 Church 2 italian 2 Rome 2 Papal 2 Italy 2 Holy 2 God 2 France 2 Father 2 Europe 2 Bologna 1 time 1 science 1 roman 1 history 1 great 1 french 1 century 1 XXII 1 White 1 Vesalius 1 VIII 1 University 1 Thomas 1 State 1 School 1 Roman 1 Renaissance 1 Professor 1 President 1 Pontifical 1 Pontiff 1 Pius 1 Physicians 1 Peter 1 Paris 1 Monsignore 1 Mondino 1 Minister 1 Middle 1 Medicine 1 Medical 1 Lord 1 John 1 Heaven 1 Government 1 Galileo 1 Footnote Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 886 time 764 man 726 century 725 science 504 work 497 history 485 year 440 medicine 377 physician 287 book 268 fact 268 anatomy 261 regard 257 day 255 university 254 matter 248 authority 246 people 246 dissection 237 order 233 subject 233 knowledge 229 world 222 life 222 hospital 221 education 220 body 214 surgery 211 interest 208 nothing 201 country 195 way 190 truth 188 school 185 thing 182 study 175 case 173 name 172 word 170 student 169 power 167 opposition 166 place 160 mind 157 part 155 city 145 practice 145 number 144 idea 143 law Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1214 _ 715 Pope 553 Church 422 Rome 349 Papal 279 Popes 179 Ages 178 Middle 165 John 163 Professor 162 Europe 160 University 160 Italy 157 St. 146 God 136 Father 130 White 128 England 126 Bologna 122 Vesalius 117 Holy 112 Catholic 108 Christ 106 Roman 103 Dr. 102 de 99 Footnote 98 Bacon 93 Paris 92 France 91 et 91 Cardinal 90 Dante 88 De 79 Physicians 75 President 73 Pius 72 III 66 Medical 65 Medicine 65 Draper 65 Boniface 64 VIII 63 Government 63 College 63 America 60 English 59 Mondino 59 . 58 School Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 2514 it 2310 he 1234 they 858 we 740 i 733 them 623 him 339 you 273 himself 221 us 188 themselves 139 me 118 itself 103 she 37 one 35 her 19 ourselves 19 myself 18 herself 10 ours 7 theirs 6 yourself 5 thee 2 yourselves 2 yours 2 pelf 2 oneself 2 mine 2 his 1 it:-- 1 hers 1 em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 10871 be 3527 have 872 do 688 make 555 say 541 know 379 give 375 find 358 take 313 come 253 think 241 become 239 see 237 show 221 go 215 write 212 call 208 suppose 208 seem 179 bring 164 consider 143 follow 139 teach 128 prove 124 receive 118 use 117 declare 114 accept 112 read 111 publish 111 accord 107 pay 104 begin 103 speak 103 look 100 tell 99 live 99 continue 98 learn 97 allow 92 believe 91 leave 91 add 90 obtain 90 let 90 found 90 contain 87 understand 85 quote 85 carry Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1845 not 682 so 658 great 613 more 580 very 521 most 505 only 482 even 480 well 473 medical 449 many 417 much 383 as 373 other 356 such 307 good 291 then 281 up 266 own 264 first 253 scientific 250 modern 243 however 242 same 218 now 203 old 203 little 201 also 186 out 182 still 182 human 181 certain 172 present 170 quite 164 just 162 least 160 far 159 never 159 long 157 important 153 always 152 here 147 true 146 thirteenth 146 almost 145 ever 144 new 143 ecclesiastical 138 medieval 138 especially Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 127 most 127 least 115 good 89 great 25 Most 22 high 17 bad 14 early 9 slight 9 late 7 strong 7 near 7 fine 6 small 6 manif 6 l 5 low 4 pure 4 old 4 mild 3 simple 3 heavy 3 gross 3 deep 2 young 2 true 2 rich 2 queer 2 mere 2 large 2 happy 2 foul 2 dear 2 bright 1 wr 1 worthy 1 wise 1 wild 1 weak 1 vain 1 vague 1 sure 1 speak 1 silly 1 shabby 1 rude 1 remote 1 quiet 1 plain 1 narrow Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 394 most 35 least 24 well 1 kindest 1 goethe Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 www.archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.archive.org/details/popesscienceOOwals Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 church was opposed 3 popes were as 2 _ is really 2 anatomy was not 2 books were dedicated 2 century was father 2 church did not 2 dissections were quite 2 men are not 2 men do not 2 men were not 2 pope is not 2 pope was not 2 popes did not 2 science was not 2 science was practically 2 work is likely 2 world was so 1 _ am _ 1 _ done _ 1 _ is now 1 _ made _ 1 _ seems unable 1 _ was _ 1 anatomy came morbid 1 anatomy does not 1 anatomy was so 1 anatomy was such 1 authorities are close 1 authorities are readily 1 authorities had much 1 authorities is evidently 1 authorities is not 1 authorities was very 1 authorities were constantly 1 authority be inherent 1 authority is loyally 1 authority is somehow 1 authority is usually 1 authority is worth 1 book has not 1 book have doubtless 1 book is really 1 book is well 1 book was first 1 books are available 1 books are still 1 centuries did not 1 centuries had much 1 centuries had not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 anatomy was not directly 1 authorities is not quite 1 centuries had not as 1 church has not only 1 church is not _ 1 church used no violence 1 dissection had not really 1 knowledge was not only 1 man are not fools 1 medicine was not very 1 men were not happy 1 men were not yet 1 pope has no children 1 pope has no power 1 popes being not only 1 popes has no existence 1 rome have not roads 1 science is not simply 1 science received no attention 1 subjects were not loyal 1 time was not sufficient 1 time were not different 1 world are not all A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 14381 author = About, Edmond title = The Roman Question date = keywords = Antonelli; Bologna; Cardinal; Church; Count; Europe; Father; France; God; Government; Heaven; Holy; Italy; Minister; Monsignore; Papal; Pius; Pontifical; Pope; Rome; St.; State; french; italian; roman summary = Pope is assisted in the temporal government of his States by the In 1847, the country lands subject to the Pope were valued at about picture; for the subjects of the Pope are Italians like the rest, and streets of Rome, you will ask yourselves to what a Roman prince can It is vain to ask these country people what is their opinion of Rome You probably think it natural that people brought up at Rome, in the If the _White Pope_, or the Holy Father, governed If the Pope were merely the head of the Roman Catholic Church; if, In the government of Rome, the Pope is Italian people who ask for a Pope,--it is Heaven that chooses him, the At Rome, the French place themselves at the disposal of the Pope for The Pope knows this, and, as a good prince, he id = 16242 author = Vaughan, John S. (John Stephen) title = The Purpose of the Papacy date = keywords = Archbishop; Bishop; Catholic; Christ; Church; England; God; Holy; Lord; Peter; Pontiff; Pope; St. summary = found in the person of the infallible Head of the Catholic Church, but from the Church of Christ the infallibility of the Pope would be like we have it on Divine authority, that the Church of Christ was to be as Church of Christ, with one truth, taught by one authority, received by THE ANGLICAN THEORY OF CONTINUITY IN THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND. THE ANGLICAN THEORY OF CONTINUITY IN THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND. THE AUTHORITY OF THE POPE IN ENGLAND IN PRE-REFORMATION TIMES. THE AUTHORITY OF THE POPE IN ENGLAND IN PRE-REFORMATION TIMES. Faith, the teaching, and the doctrine--in a word, the Church Cardinals exercising authority in the Church in England. Catholic, or less like the Anglican Church of the "Reformation," it present Church of England, which repudiates the authority of the Pope of their devotion and faith towards God and the Holy Roman Church". id = 34019 author = Walsh, James J. (James Joseph) title = The Popes and Science The History of the Papal Relations to Science During the Middle Ages and Down to Our Own Time date = keywords = Ages; America; Bacon; Bologna; Boniface; Church; College; Columbus; Dante; Dr.; Draper; English; Europe; Father; Footnote; France; Galileo; Italy; John; Medical; Medicine; Middle; Mondino; Papal; Paris; Physicians; Pope; President; Professor; Renaissance; Roman; Rome; School; St.; Thomas; University; VIII; Vesalius; White; XXII; century; great; history; italian; science; time summary = Lives of the men to whom nineteenth century medical science owes most. during the sixteenth century, at a time when, if we would believe Dr. White, the Church authorities were doing everything in their power to medicine and medical schools must be retold with regard to science in After a detailed study of the history of medical science in the Middle time the history of anatomy in Italy centers around the Papal Medical by special invitation at the Congress of Arts and Sciences of St. Louis in 1904, this distinguished authority in the history of medicine regard to works in medicine and surgery at this time, the book abounds Popes to medical science and (because of the fact that physicians were this time the Popes began the work of making their Medical School at the men who did the great original work in last century medicine were