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. Eric Lease Morgan May 27, 2019 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 19867 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 89 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 TCP 3 man 3 disease 3 Physician 2 thing 2 haue 2 cure 2 God 2 Galen 1 water 1 vse 1 vpon 1 vnderstanding 1 true 1 time 1 themselue 1 stone 1 selfe 1 right 1 reason 1 people 1 owne 1 oft 1 non 1 nature 1 medicine 1 like 1 life 1 lib 1 knowledge 1 hath 1 great 1 good 1 euer 1 est 1 early 1 doth 1 common 1 cause 1 body 1 Voice 1 Urine 1 Urinall 1 Symptomes 1 Religion 1 Pisse 1 Physition 1 Physicke 1 Patient 1 Mr. Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 594 man 563 disease 327 thing 307 time 225 body 221 part 215 reason 215 nature 187 knowledge 182 water 176 cause 153 life 148 medicine 142 woman 140 selfe 134 themselue 133 vse 118 text 118 doth 116 place 110 cure 107 messenger 106 patient 105 other 104 child 103 physician 101 power 101 people 99 health 98 day 97 hath 97 art 96 vrine 96 experience 93 danger 90 opinion 89 nothing 88 practise 86 hand 84 way 84 head 83 work 83 word 79 eye 78 case 78 age 77 party 76 miracle 73 sense 72 person Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 900 〉 865 〈 858 ◊ 236 de 195 hath 170 God 144 c. 141 Galen 138 haue 133 ● 132 est 119 lib 118 Urine 107 owne 106 TCP 104 Physicians 84 Physicke 74 Dr. 69 Doctour 68 e 68 d 67 Doctor 66 b 64 g 63 Empiriks 62 doe 61 f 59 Arte 57 De 56 Physition 55 c 53 English 51 l. 50 Physician 50 Censors 49 Vrine 48 doth 48 Physick 48 Fever 47 vel 47 ex 45 beene 44 Mr. 42 quae 41 aut 41 EEBO 40 Text 40 TEI 39 à 39 generall Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 1732 it 1277 i 821 they 795 he 688 you 598 them 410 him 292 she 216 me 215 her 159 we 57 us 50 themselves 32 himself 15 thee 7 vp 6 vnto 6 one 4 his 3 yours 3 mine 2 hers 1 ● 1 yourselves 1 thēselues 1 theirs 1 nay 1 l 1 intuēs 1 impostorū 1 ib 1 e 1 c Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 5061 be 884 have 400 do 327 make 245 take 229 say 224 vnto 215 know 188 come 187 learn 184 tell 156 give 137 see 129 find 121 bring 104 let 99 haue 98 shew 96 send 93 call 91 think 89 hath 86 cure 85 accord 81 set 79 pretend 79 go 74 use 71 neuer 68 perceive 66 affect 65 follow 64 write 62 require 58 thinke 58 put 55 suppose 55 answer 54 fall 54 consider 52 work 52 want 52 doe 51 create 50 vse 50 desire 48 sicke 48 encode 48 die 46 look Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1303 not 635 so 433 other 411 more 339 good 323 many 307 great 301 then 288 such 281 now 259 well 258 therefore 253 most 220 much 204 first 203 same 196 also 180 very 175 true 174 common 174 as 168 yet 151 onely 140 thus 128 too 124 out 123 long 108 only 106 sometimes 93 former 89 little 87 oft 87 indeed 82 ignorant 80 like 80 here 79 up 76 right 75 last 73 able 72 wise 70 there 67 thereby 67 strange 66 thereof 66 therein 65 early 65 commonly 63 never 63 all Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 122 most 70 good 37 least 25 great 20 manif 12 safe 11 mean 11 e 11 bad 7 vtmost 6 high 5 near 3 wise 3 speedy 3 low 3 long 3 late 3 l 3 honest 3 cheap 2 weak 2 vnhon 2 true 2 small 2 sicke 2 rare 2 haru 2 fair 2 crafty 2 chief 1 wr 1 wild 1 sure 1 strong 1 ripe 1 right 1 pot 1 plain 1 midd 1 lou 1 light 1 healthfull 1 gren 1 g 1 fit 1 few 1 farth 1 dull 1 dreadful 1 clear Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 131 most 4 well 4 least 1 soon 1 potest 1 est Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 www.tei-c.org 8 eebo.chadwyck.com Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 8 http://www.tei-c.org 8 http://eebo.chadwyck.com Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 god hath giuen 2 disease is not 2 diseases are either 2 hath been thus 2 hath set downe 2 man hath not 2 man is not 2 nature is not 2 selfe made knowne 1 bodies do hardly 1 body is not 1 body is strong 1 body knows whence 1 body made heauy 1 cause are well 1 cause being onely 1 cause is so 1 causes are as 1 causes are coincident 1 disease being now 1 disease had so 1 disease hath once 1 disease is dangerous 1 disease was manifest 1 diseases are altogether 1 diseases are both 1 diseases are euer 1 diseases are knowen 1 diseases are not 1 diseases being only 1 diseases do not 1 diseases haue many 1 diseases haue thus 1 doth call wisemen 1 doth come too 1 doth know rightly 1 doth make supplie 1 doth make warie 1 doth neuer erre 1 doth neuer freely 1 doth neuer receiue 1 galen came thither 1 god being therefore 1 god gives not 1 god hath qualified 1 god is iust 1 god is nature 1 god was agreeable 1 hath been able 1 hath been already Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 god gives not evidence 1 haue taken no other 1 life is not presently 1 man hath not power 1 men are no c 1 men are not capable 1 nature is not alway 1 nature is not yet 1 parts are not so 1 selfe be no true 1 selfe were not seene 1 themselues are not free 1 water shew no disease 1 women come not short A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = A29124 author = Bradmore, Sarah. title = Mrs. Sarah Bradmores prophecy of the wonders that will happen, anno Dom. 1687 Also what will be the effects of the whales comeing up the river of Thames, and continued the 4th. and 5th. of August, anno Dom. 1686. date = 1686 keywords = TCP; early summary = Mrs. Sarah Bradmores prophecy of the wonders that will happen, anno Dom. 1687 Also what will be the effects of the whales comeing up the river of Thames, and continued the 4th. Mrs. Sarah Bradmores prophecy of the wonders that will happen, anno Dom. 1687 Also what will be the effects of the whales comeing up the river of Thames, and continued the 4th. EEBO-TCP is a partnership between the Universities of Michigan and Oxford and the publisher ProQuest to create accurately transcribed and encoded texts based on the image sets published by ProQuest via their Early English Books Online (EEBO) database (http://eebo.chadwyck.com). EEBO-TCP aimed to produce large quantities of textual data within the usual project restraints of time and funding, and therefore chose to create diplomatic transcriptions (as opposed to critical editions) with light-touch, mainly structural encoding based on the Text Encoding Initiative (http://www.tei-c.org). id = A16823 author = Brian, Thomas, 17th cent. title = The pisse-prophet, or, Certaine pisse-pot lectures Wherein are newly discovered the old fallacies, deceit, and jugling of the pisse-pot science, used by all those (whether quacks and empiricks, or other methodicall physicians) who pretend knowledge of diseases, by the urine, in giving judgement of the same. By Tho. Brian, M.P. lately in the citie of London, and now in Colchester in Essex. Never heretofore published by any man in the English tongue. date = 1637 keywords = Chronicall; Doctour; Fever; Patient; Physician; Pisse; Symptomes; TCP; Urinall; Urine; disease; water summary = This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. The pisse-prophet, or, Certaine pisse-pot lectures Wherein are newly discovered the old fallacies, deceit, and jugling of the pisse-pot science, used by all those (whether quacks and empiricks, or other methodicall physicians) who pretend knowledge of diseases, by the urine, in giving judgement of the same. The pisse-prophet, or, Certaine pisse-pot lectures Wherein are newly discovered the old fallacies, deceit, and jugling of the pisse-pot science, used by all those (whether quacks and empiricks, or other methodicall physicians) who pretend knowledge of diseases, by the urine, in giving judgement of the same. EEBO-TCP is a partnership between the Universities of Michigan and Oxford and the publisher ProQuest to create accurately transcribed and encoded texts based on the image sets published by ProQuest via their Early English Books Online (EEBO) database (http://eebo.chadwyck.com). id = A19403 author = Cotta, John, 1575?-1650? title = A short discouerie of the vnobserued dangers of seuerall sorts of ignorant and vnconsiderate practisers of physicke in England profitable not onely for the deceiued multitude, and easie for their meane capacities, but raising reformed and more aduised thoughts in the best vnderstandings: with direction for the safest election of a physition in necessitie: by Iohn Cotta of Northampton Doctor in Physicke. date = 1612 keywords = Empericke; Galen; God; Physition; TCP; cause; common; disease; doth; est; euer; good; hath; haue; knowledge; lib; life; like; man; medicine; nature; non; oft; owne; reason; right; selfe; themselue; thing; time; true; vnderstanding; vpon; vse summary = A short discouerie of the vnobserued dangers of seuerall sorts of ignorant and vnconsiderate practisers of physicke in England profitable not onely for the deceiued multitude, and easie for their meane capacities, but raising reformed and more aduised thoughts in the best vnderstandings: with direction for the safest election of a physition in necessitie: by Iohn Cotta of Northampton Doctor in Physicke. A short discouerie of the vnobserued dangers of seuerall sorts of ignorant and vnconsiderate practisers of physicke in England profitable not onely for the deceiued multitude, and easie for their meane capacities, but raising reformed and more aduised thoughts in the best vnderstandings: with direction for the safest election of a physition in necessitie: by Iohn Cotta of Northampton Doctor in Physicke. EEBO-TCP aimed to produce large quantities of textual data within the usual project restraints of time and funding, and therefore chose to create diplomatic transcriptions (as opposed to critical editions) with light-touch, mainly structural encoding based on the Text Encoding Initiative (http://www.tei-c.org). id = A19740 author = Duncon, Eleazar, 1597 or 8-1660. title = The copy of a letter written by E.D. Doctour of Physicke to a gentleman, by whom it was published The former part conteineth rules for the preseruation of health, and preuenting of all diseases vntill extreme olde age. Herein is inserted the authours opinion of tabacco. The latter is a discourse of emperiks or vnlearned physitians, wherein is plainly prooued that the practise of all those which haue not beene brought vp in the grammar and vniuersity, is alwayes confused, commonly dangerous, and often deadly. date = 1606 keywords = Arte; Empiriks; English; Galen; Hippoc; Physician; Physicke; TCP; body; cure; disease; great; haue; man; thing summary = The copy of a letter written by E.D. Doctour of Physicke to a gentleman, by whom it was published The former part conteineth rules for the preseruation of health, and preuenting of all diseases vntill extreme olde age. The copy of a letter written by E.D. Doctour of Physicke to a gentleman, by whom it was published The former part conteineth rules for the preseruation of health, and preuenting of all diseases vntill extreme olde age. The latter is a discourse of emperiks or vnlearned physitians, wherein is plainly prooued that the practise of all those which haue not beene brought vp in the grammar and vniuersity, is alwayes confused, commonly dangerous, and often deadly. The latter is a discourse of emperiks or vnlearned physitians, wherein is plainly prooued that the practise of all those which haue not beene brought vp in the grammar and vniuersity, is alwayes confused, commonly dangerous, and often deadly. id = A39814 author = Fletcher, R. (Richard), fl. 1676-1677. title = A character of a true physician, or, A true chymist compared with a goose-quill pedant with a short view of the frauds and abuses in physick, committed by the confederate prescribing doctoral methodists, with their combinators the apothecaries ... : being a vindication of such physicians as follow not their method but make and administer their own medicines, being the honestest, safest, cheapest, and speediest way of practice, both for physician and patient / by R. Fletcher ... date = 1676 keywords = Apothecaries; Man; Medicines; Men; Physician; TCP summary = A character of a true physician, or, A true chymist compared with a goose-quill pedant with a short view of the frauds and abuses in physick, committed by the confederate prescribing doctoral methodists, with their combinators the apothecaries ... A character of a true physician, or, A true chymist compared with a goose-quill pedant with a short view of the frauds and abuses in physick, committed by the confederate prescribing doctoral methodists, with their combinators the apothecaries ... : being a vindication of such physicians as follow not their method but make and administer their own medicines, being the honestest, safest, cheapest, and speediest way of practice, both for physician and patient / by R. : being a vindication of such physicians as follow not their method but make and administer their own medicines, being the honestest, safest, cheapest, and speediest way of practice, both for physician and patient / by R. id = A42184 author = Groeneveldt, Jan, 1647?-1710?. title = The late censors deservedly censured; and their spurious litter of libels against Dr. Greenfield, and others, justly expos''d to contempt by the following answer to all, but especially the last, intituled, A reply to the reasons against the censors of the College of Physicians, &c. Humbly offer''d to the perusal of Dr. Thomas Burwell, Richard Torles, William Daws, Thomas Gill, the late censors. By Lysiponius Celer M.D.L. date = 1698 keywords = Blood; Censors; College; Court; Doctor; Dr.; Fact; Greenfield; Justice; Law; TCP summary = The late censors deservedly censured; and their spurious litter of libels against Dr. Greenfield, and others, justly expos''d to contempt by the following answer to all, but especially the last, intituled, A reply to the reasons against the censors of the College of Physicians, &c. The late censors deservedly censured; and their spurious litter of libels against Dr. Greenfield, and others, justly expos''d to contempt by the following answer to all, but especially the last, intituled, A reply to the reasons against the censors of the College of Physicians, &c. Humbly offer''d to the perusal of Dr. Thomas Burwell, Richard Torles, William Daws, Thomas Gill, the late censors. EEBO-TCP aimed to produce large quantities of textual data within the usual project restraints of time and funding, and therefore chose to create diplomatic transcriptions (as opposed to critical editions) with light-touch, mainly structural encoding based on the Text Encoding Initiative (http://www.tei-c.org). id = A48797 author = Lloyd, David, 1635-1692. title = Wonders no miracles, or, Mr. Valentine Greatrates gift of healing examined upon occasion of a sad effect of his stroaking, March the 7, 1665, at one Mr. Cressets house in Charter-house-yard : in a letter to a reverend divine, living near that place. date = 1666 keywords = God; Greatrates; Kings; Miracles; Mr.; Religion; TCP; Voice; cure; man; people summary = This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. Wonders no miracles, or, Mr. Valentine Greatrates gift of healing examined upon occasion of a sad effect of his stroaking, March the 7, 1665, at one Mr. Cressets house in Charter-house-yard : in a letter to a reverend divine, living near that place. Wonders no miracles, or, Mr. Valentine Greatrates gift of healing examined upon occasion of a sad effect of his stroaking, March the 7, 1665, at one Mr. Cressets house in Charter-house-yard : in a letter to a reverend divine, living near that place. EEBO-TCP aimed to produce large quantities of textual data within the usual project restraints of time and funding, and therefore chose to create diplomatic transcriptions (as opposed to critical editions) with light-touch, mainly structural encoding based on the Text Encoding Initiative (http://www.tei-c.org). id = A07305 author = Maximinus, Iacobus. title = Whereas the professor hereof, Iacobus Maximinus, borne in Italy, and lately come out of Germanie, hath attained vnto the demonstration of the making of foure most strange and rare artificiall stones, and a sweete ball, and the true vertues thereof: and the names and colours of euery stone The first, is the moraccolocius stone is white: the famous amethist is the redde stone: the famous safaris is the purple stone: the safonya, which is the straw coloured stone, &c. date = 1622 keywords = TCP; stone summary = Whereas the professor hereof, Iacobus Maximinus, borne in Italy, and lately come out of Germanie, hath attained vnto the demonstration of the making of foure most strange and rare artificiall stones, and a sweete ball, and the true vertues thereof: and the names and colours of euery stone The first, is the moraccolocius stone is white: the famous amethist is the redde stone: the famous safaris is the purple stone: the safonya, which is the straw coloured stone, &c. Whereas the professor hereof, Iacobus Maximinus, borne in Italy, and lately come out of Germanie, hath attained vnto the demonstration of the making of foure most strange and rare artificiall stones, and a sweete ball, and the true vertues thereof: and the names and colours of euery stone The first, is the moraccolocius stone is white: the famous amethist is the redde stone: the famous safaris is the purple stone: the safonya, which is the straw coloured stone, &c.