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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 6 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 81827 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 58 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 Mill 3 french 3 England 2 right 2 man 2 human 2 history 2 great 2 good 2 english 2 Works 2 Utilitarians 2 Smith 2 Reid 2 Mr. 2 Lord 2 James 2 Ibid 2 Hume 2 House 2 France 2 Coleridge 2 Bentham 1 work 1 thing 1 society 1 socialism 1 russian 1 roman 1 religion 1 property 1 present 1 place 1 person 1 note 1 moral 1 mind 1 matter 1 like 1 life 1 letter 1 law 1 labor 1 justice 1 idea 1 happiness 1 form 1 feeling 1 desire 1 class Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1092 man 699 law 635 time 598 fact 589 principle 517 life 468 society 442 idea 441 doctrine 437 class 436 thing 427 theory 410 power 407 case 402 right 389 system 387 p. 380 part 368 question 366 mind 361 country 360 interest 345 year 340 people 339 sense 329 work 329 history 328 happiness 328 cause 325 view 320 order 317 world 317 action 315 point 312 day 312 character 310 way 301 government 295 nothing 291 person 289 pleasure 286 letter 285 state 283 place 279 word 278 other 275 religion 274 hand 270 century 268 justice Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 5334 _ 758 Bentham 608 Mill 418 Mr. 367 Ibid 269 Malthus 267 Works 221 England 208 i. 172 Utilitarians 158 ii 150 France 140 India 139 James 133 Ricardo 131 Hume 130 Byron 127 Lord 123 x. 121 English 118 M. 116 London 114 Coleridge 109 State 107 Stewart 107 Europe 103 Smith 102 God 100 Asia 97 © 95 John 95 Brown 93 Church 89 Sir 89 Reid 87 Political 86 Thackeray 86 J. 82 Review 82 Ollivier 80 Cobbett 79 Macaulay 76 Utilitarianism 76 S. 76 Mackintosh 75 de 75 Scott 71 Whig 71 Stephen 68 House Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 4698 it 4281 he 1871 they 1870 we 1137 i 955 them 831 him 453 us 426 himself 394 you 344 itself 269 themselves 132 me 111 one 86 she 52 myself 52 her 49 ourselves 16 theirs 14 herself 12 oneself 8 yourself 6 mine 5 thee 5 his 3 yours 2 thyself 2 hers 1 whereof 1 virtue,--for 1 southey 1 overdrawn 1 ourself 1 ours 1 ii 1 hector,[20 1 ''em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 20778 be 5941 have 1369 do 1044 make 896 say 811 take 805 give 587 become 540 see 432 think 427 show 424 find 384 know 358 write 353 seem 343 come 333 call 293 admit 289 produce 280 bring 274 lead 273 mean 272 go 267 hold 265 follow 257 appear 245 regard 243 represent 233 exist 231 consider 229 suppose 225 speak 213 leave 209 accord 201 accept 199 require 198 form 197 believe 187 work 187 pass 186 use 185 begin 182 suggest 179 tell 178 imply 174 explain 173 publish 172 set 171 get 168 observe Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3460 not 1213 more 1120 so 1081 other 962 only 944 great 682 most 667 very 623 own 593 same 581 first 579 such 547 as 530 even 518 much 505 up 483 general 480 well 473 good 468 now 450 however 430 political 416 far 415 out 413 therefore 412 then 398 many 387 still 373 whole 369 moral 364 human 346 also 345 less 344 certain 336 long 316 always 312 thus 300 high 299 social 298 different 294 true 294 too 283 never 272 new 268 indeed 260 old 248 natural 247 here 246 english 242 really Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 181 least 145 good 141 great 118 most 68 high 41 bad 35 strong 21 late 19 early 15 small 15 large 15 fine 13 slight 12 low 11 Most 9 simple 9 able 8 wide 8 noble 8 full 7 minute 7 keen 6 happy 6 fit 5 weak 5 rich 5 pure 5 poor 5 near 5 manif 5 eld 5 deep 4 sure 4 common 4 close 3 warm 3 severe 3 loud 3 long 3 hard 3 gross 3 grave 3 extreme 3 base 3 acute 2 wild 2 vile 2 veri 2 strict 2 pithy Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 564 most 32 well 15 least 2 worst 2 shortest 1 ¦ 1 widest 1 smallest 1 hard 1 fast 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 _ is _ 5 man is not 4 bentham does not 3 laws were not 3 mill had not 3 society has never 2 _ be bad 2 _ do n''t 2 _ has _ 2 bentham had already 2 bentham was clearly 2 bentham was ready 2 class was identical 2 doctrine be true 2 doctrine does not 2 doctrine is so 2 facts are significant 2 ideas are entirely 2 laws had directly 2 life are inseparably 2 life has ever 2 man does not 2 man was not 2 men were not 2 people are not 2 principles were correct 2 question does not 2 question is not 2 things are desirable 1 _ are _ 1 _ are celebrities 1 _ are entirely 1 _ are mainly 1 _ are now 1 _ be _ 1 _ became restricted 1 _ did _ 1 _ did not 1 _ does _ 1 _ has not 1 _ has nothing 1 _ have thoughts 1 _ have wives 1 _ is better 1 _ is ill 1 _ is more 1 _ is not 1 _ is perhaps 1 _ is too 1 _ is unique Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 man was not likely 2 people are not practical 1 _ is not complete 1 bentham does not clearly 1 bentham was no rousseau 1 cases are no doubt 1 classes did not so 1 doctrine does not as 1 doctrine is no doubt 1 interest were not sooner 1 interests is not likely 1 law are not able 1 law has not yet 1 law was not designedly 1 laws have not quite 1 laws were not eternal 1 laws were not explicitly 1 man has no other 1 men were not necessarily 1 mill has not only 1 mill wrote no more 1 mind has no dramatic 1 mind was not conscious 1 parts are no longer 1 people have no apparent 1 power is not adequate 1 powers had no philosophical 1 question does not at 1 question does not particularly 1 question is not even 1 question is not primarily 1 questions was not first 1 right did not originally 1 system was no longer 1 theories are not really 1 time is not high 1 times were not ripe A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 25937 author = Lyall, Alfred Comyn, Sir title = Studies in Literature and History date = keywords = Arnold; Asia; Benedetti; Bismarck; Byron; Carlyle; Caucasus; China; Christianity; Church; Coleridge; England; Esmond; Europe; France; Government; Gramont; India; Islam; Lord; Mill; Mohammedan; Mr.; Ollivier; Prussia; Scott; Shamil; Sir; State; Stephen; Swinburne; Thackeray; afghan; asiatic; british; english; french; history; letter; religion; roman; russian summary = of human life, very present to the minds of men familiar with battle service of her fiction, she was making a distinct attempt, as Mr. Raleigh points out, to bring romance into closer relation with great eighteenth-century school of English novelists, with Richardson selective hand of Time had been at work for generations, developing line, as writers of letters that have great original and intrinsic first-class letter-writing, like poetry, has been inspired by the although fine letter-writers, like poets, are few and far between, yet upon the great events of contemporary history, like the French War, or interpreting Indian life and ideas to the English public in this form why great wars produce so little heroic verse: it may be questioned from the great world of their day that important changes in manners sketches of the state of English society at different periods, by way =Letter-writing (English) in the Nineteenth Century=, 34-75. id = 11224 author = Mill, John Stuart title = Utilitarianism date = keywords = desire; feeling; good; happiness; human; justice; moral; person; right summary = of things upon their happiness, the principle of utility, or as Bentham Greatest Happiness Principle, holds that actions are right in proportion feeling of moral obligation to prefer it, that is the more desirable standard of morality, and of the very meaning of the words right and the supreme law of morals, I answer, that an utilitarian who believes in happiness is desirable, except that each person, so far as he believes pain, but that the will is a different thing from desire; that a person Justice, only a particular kind or branch of general utility, and think we think that a person is bound in justice to do a thing, it is an the term appeared generally to involve the idea of a personal right--a right in some person, correlative to the moral obligation--constitutes not place the distinction between justice and morality in general where principle of utility, if it be not that ''happiness'' and ''desirable'' are id = 38138 author = Mill, John Stuart title = Socialism date = keywords = Communism; class; great; labor; present; property; socialism; society; work summary = great increase of electoral power which the Act places within the SOCIALIST OBJECTIONS TO THE PRESENT ORDER OF SOCIETY. present exist in society as part of their case, whether these are society in respect to Property and the Production and Distribution of that it is possible in our present state of society to develop, to produce a repugnance for work--a disgust for labor. THE SOCIALIST OBJECTIONS TO THE PRESENT ORDER OF SOCIETY EXAMINED. of property in anything which is the product of human labor and a new order of society, in which private property and individual produce of the community''s labor as any other member of it; he would regard to the great majority of the producing classes. many different kinds of work required in every society are very or not of labor, the society divides the remainder of the produce For instance, in early states of society, the right of property did id = 25788 author = Stephen, Leslie title = The English Utilitarians, Volume 2 (of 3) James Mill date = keywords = Analysis; Bentham; Brown; Cobbett; Coleridge; Economy; Edinburgh; England; Essay; House; Hume; Ibid; James; Macaulay; Mackintosh; Malthus; Mill; Owen; Place; Political; Reid; Review; Ricardo; Smith; Utilitarians; Whig; Works; french summary = In questions of foreign policy, of law reform, of political economy, great social changes which were bringing new classes into political shown, depends upon ''the law of human nature''[85] that ''a man, if ''grand governing law of human nature'' that we desire such power as state, the fact that the theories were held is important. The difference is that Malthus regards evil in general not as a sort population when it follows in its natural order is both a great sole question is,'' says Malthus,[261] ''what is this principle? expansive force of population is, in a sense, the great motive power another thing to explain each set of facts in turn by theories which Ricardo''s doctrine, then, is Malthus carried out more logically. true nature and influence of great social processes, and in practice the others state the first principles embodied in Malthus''s theory of [297] Malthus admits the general principle of free trade, but supports id = 27597 author = Stephen, Leslie title = The English Utilitarians, Volume 1 (of 3) date = keywords = Bentham; Code; Dumont; England; France; George; House; Ibid; James; John; Legislation; Locke; London; Lord; Mill; Morals; Panopticon; Pitt; Reid; Smith; Stewart; Tooke; Utilitarians; Works; Young; english; french; great; man; note summary = this time for teaching logic.[209] Bentham was set to read Watt''s [201] The main authority for Bentham''s Life is Bowring''s account in the reference to it will show that Bentham by this time took the Voltairean At this time, Bentham says, that his was ''truly a miserable life.''[226] groundless.''[244] Bentham apparently argued that a man who did not like ''rights of man'' and ''equality'' than Bentham''s thoroughly scientific Bentham''s work would supply the principles and the classification. during Peel''s law reforms at this time Bentham frequently communicated general terms that Bentham founded not a doctrine but a method: and that Bentham''s general principles may be very simply stated. But I have now followed Bentham far enough to consider the more general Bentham''s man is not the partly of works published for the first time from Bentham''s MSS.; and Bentham--written between 1786 and 1789, first appeared in the _Works_ Bentham''s principles are sufficiently stated in his published id = 29917 author = Thornton, William Thomas title = Old-Fashioned Ethics and Common-Sense Metaphysics With Some of Their Applications date = keywords = Buckle; Comte; Darwin; Descartes; Galton; God; Hume; Huxley; Mill; Mr.; Nature; Professor; Utilitarianism; cause; certain; form; good; history; human; idea; law; life; like; man; matter; mind; place; right; thing summary = mankind, the utilitarian idea of the greatest possible happiness, or, at virtue and morality, right and wrong, are to continue to mean anything person; (2) right equally absolute to dispose similarly of the produce venture to think, need less store be set by that right in consequence of laws as ought to exist,'' what had previously appeared probable is conceivable that the large general causes assumed to regulate human continually taking place in those other general causes which constitute of abstract qualities all our general or class notions are equally ideas different thoughts or ideas of the mind'' is, as he says, sufficiently animated creature, may possibly be directly from God. One thing certain natural laws, it always remains possible for miracles to happen. self-acting forces--equally whether it be the author or merely the laws of universal human nature evidently cannot serve as materials, that the particular generation of human beings at any time existing