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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 24 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 81584 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 67 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 man 10 great 9 God 7 life 7 Professor 7 Mr. 6 illustration 6 human 6 Man 6 Europe 6 Dr. 6 America 5 time 5 nature 5 form 5 find 5 North 5 Darwin 4 history 4 body 4 ape 4 animal 3 plant 3 low 3 chapter 3 Society 3 Orang 3 Lake 3 Gorilla 3 France 3 England 3 Chimpanzee 3 Africa 2 year 2 world 2 thing 2 skull 2 section 2 primitive 2 power 2 period 2 modern 2 mind 2 love 2 like 2 individual 2 good 2 foot 2 fig 2 fact Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 6746 man 3513 animal 3277 time 2885 part 2450 life 2427 male 2389 form 2362 specie 2198 case 2116 period 2017 p. 1964 body 1843 female 1761 foot 1756 year 1738 fact 1730 race 1625 nature 1559 development 1489 sex 1379 character 1373 difference 1363 bone 1361 bird 1359 world 1353 land 1344 history 1336 condition 1319 thing 1315 water 1271 hand 1248 power 1244 number 1233 sea 1217 day 1210 place 1204 age 1186 side 1180 people 1167 colour 1162 way 1162 ape 1126 head 1121 mind 1100 child 1087 cell 1076 state 1049 woman 1031 skull 1025 work Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 6404 _ 1555 Mr. 1126 pp 970 Man 826 New 795 Europe 766 Dr. 693 America 653 FIGURE 609 Vol 607 vol 562 London 537 Africa 536 York 490 | 480 A. 465 Figure 446 M. 430 Zen 421 North 413 Professor 392 God 390 Q. 388 Asia 382 Darwin 362 England 360 Egypt 346 India 337 South 296 Sir 290 France 283 Society 282 St. 266 Gorilla 258 II 251 Buddha 236 de 234 i. 230 Life 227 . 226 Orang 223 Indians 216 Sea 211 China 208 CHAPTER 207 States 207 Mediterranean 199 J. 198 British 198 Alps Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 17217 it 8673 we 7215 they 5798 he 4716 i 3683 them 1951 us 1652 him 1399 you 824 itself 817 she 786 me 774 himself 662 themselves 446 her 257 ourselves 228 one 158 myself 67 herself 33 yourself 28 oneself 21 ours 14 theirs 11 thee 11 his 9 mine 6 thyself 5 hers 2 ye 2 whereof 2 trevelyan 2 thy 2 ib 2 effigiem 1 yours 1 you''ll 1 years?--they 1 trodden 1 rule:--there 1 nature,--the 1 ii 1 i.--butcher 1 hence:-- 1 flesh:--a 1 cn 1 cited:-- 1 bd 1 ''s Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 68753 be 21068 have 3736 do 3544 find 2929 make 2660 see 2293 give 2213 take 2183 say 1979 know 1825 become 1586 form 1584 come 1562 call 1424 show 1235 seem 1219 live 1161 appear 1109 develop 1069 exist 1048 go 1007 follow 883 bring 841 remain 825 produce 790 bear 783 leave 766 use 723 let 718 pass 689 suppose 687 lead 687 believe 681 grow 679 differ 675 occur 673 think 667 consider 661 begin 658 contain 653 observe 648 accord 632 lie 620 hold 620 belong 599 regard 564 draw 555 prove 546 consist 535 look Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 9383 not 5060 other 5013 more 4218 great 4052 so 3627 same 3390 only 2963 first 2958 very 2852 most 2597 many 2498 long 2402 such 2266 much 2226 also 2212 low 2165 well 2108 as 2072 high 2071 human 2043 now 1983 even 1960 then 1890 large 1660 small 1605 far 1573 old 1565 thus 1544 up 1426 different 1411 certain 1399 early 1349 therefore 1348 still 1333 less 1287 good 1245 new 1222 however 1188 out 1184 little 1154 natural 1105 here 1102 often 1034 primitive 1031 whole 988 almost 985 young 984 present 974 common 955 various Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 744 most 467 least 416 high 396 good 376 low 351 great 316 early 263 old 133 large 132 near 100 simple 94 late 75 small 73 strong 65 Most 45 bad 44 deep 41 slight 29 noble 27 rude 27 fine 26 manif 23 fit 22 long 21 pure 16 wise 16 broad 15 wide 15 full 15 close 15 clear 14 new 14 minute 14 easy 13 grand 13 common 12 safe 12 innermost 11 sure 11 hot 10 short 10 narrow 10 cold 9 hard 9 happy 8 strange 8 plain 8 mean 8 lofty 7 slow Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 2108 most 136 well 90 least 5 oldest 3 worst 2 soon 2 near 2 merest 2 greatest 1 lowest 1 lookest 1 long 1 innermost 1 highest 1 hard 1 goethe 1 finest 1 fast 1 early 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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 19 man is not 14 life is not 10 man does not 9 sexes do not 8 sexes are alike 7 _ is _ 7 animals do not 7 males are much 6 males are more 6 man lived cotemporaneously 5 case is different 5 case is very 5 female does not 5 male is generally 5 male is more 5 males are generally 5 man is good 5 man was not 5 men are not 5 men do not 5 nature is not 5 sexes are equally 4 birds do not 4 bones are entirely 4 development is not 4 fact is certain 4 fact is so 4 feet are longer 4 female is more 4 female is much 4 foot is longer 4 males are almost 4 man is bad 4 man is more 4 man was aboriginally 4 sexes are nearly 4 sexes are separate 4 species do not 4 world is full 3 animal is excited 3 animal is not 3 animals are not 3 animals are very 3 animals is not 3 body is nothing 3 body is very 3 bones are always 3 case is widely 3 cases are not 3 character is common Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 man is not only 2 sexes do not commonly 2 times was not generally 1 _ do not _ 1 _ have not that 1 _ is no man 1 _ were not _ 1 animal is not less 1 animal were not dense 1 animals are not merely 1 animals have no doubt 1 animals have no nervous 1 animals is not altogether 1 animals is not surprising 1 bird do not at 1 birds do not commonly 1 birds do not so 1 birds were not albinos 1 bodies are not afterwards 1 bodies are not mere 1 bodies have not greatly 1 body are not less 1 body have no need 1 body is no more 1 body is not really 1 case be not more 1 case is no better 1 case is not likely 1 cases are not opposed 1 cases are not very 1 cases have no resemblance 1 character was not great 1 characters are not objectionable 1 characters did not always 1 development is not less 1 development is not so 1 development is not yet 1 difference is no safe 1 difference is not difficult 1 difference is not far 1 difference is not great 1 fact is not more 1 facts are not incompatible 1 female is not thus 1 females have not sufficient 1 foot has not altogether 1 history are not nearly 1 land does not alone 1 land has not yet 1 land was not able A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 2300 author = Darwin, Charles title = The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex date = keywords = Africa; America; Animals; Australia; Birds; Blyth; Brehm; Domestication; Dr.; Europeans; Gould; India; Indians; Islands; Journal; Lepidoptera; Lubbock; Mr.; Nat; Natural; New; North; Proc; Prof.; Quadrumana; Review; Sir; Society; South; States; United; Variation; Wallace; Zoological; british; character; colour; female; fig; history; male; man; order; plant; sex; sexual summary = foregoing, the males and females of some animals differ in structures male differs greatly in colour from the female, as well as from the As the males and females of many animals differ somewhat in habits and The sexes do not generally differ much in colour, but the males are being widely different in the males and females of certain species, In most cases the males and females of distinct species that the males of some species differ widely in colour from the females, females; and yet, when the sexes differ, the males are almost always the the females in comparison with the males cannot be accounted for, as Mr. Wallace believes to be the case with birds, by the greater exposure of When the male differs in colour from the female, he generally exhibits differences of, with those of man; fighting of males for the females; id = 42741 author = Dawson, John William, Sir title = The Story of the Earth and Man date = keywords = America; Cambrian; Carboniferous; Cloth; Devonian; England; Eocene; Eozoon; Europe; God; Laurentian; Mesozoic; Miocene; North; Palæozoic; Primordial; Sheep; Silurian; Tertiary; Trilobites; Upper; animal; cretaceous; great; history; life; low; modern; period; permian; plant; post summary = of the Neozoic.--Great Eocene Seas.--Land Animals old world, rocks of this age do not, so far as known, appear so representatives of all the great groups of animals which yet exist, animals have run through a great number of different forms, these in which the forms of Lower Silurian life continued to exist until forms, have existed from the Silurian to the present time. water, and the great continental plateaus were changed from coral seas great coal measures of the middle portion as the type of the land life those great low plains formed by the elevation of the former sea bed. fishes of the coal period very probably had, like their modern the sea, and notice the animal life of the great coral reefs and shell The next or closing period of this great Mesozoic time brought a prevalence of the modern types of coral animals and of a great number id = 17239 author = Fiske, John title = The Destiny of Man, Viewed in the Light of His Origin date = keywords = C.P.; Fiske; God; Humanity; Man; Mr.; great; high; human; life; work summary = Man''s Place in Nature, as affected by the Copernican Theory. Man''s Place in Nature, as affected by the Copernican Theory. remain, it appears that the higher forms of life--including Man a higher view of the workings of God and of the nature of Man than was On the Earth there will never be a Higher Creature than Man. In elucidating these points, we may fitly begin by considering the psychically speaking, between civilized man and the ape is so great as natural selection has worked, the earth and most of its living things increasing intelligence and enlarged experience of half-human man now new ones appear; and in man these phenomena come to have great End of the Working of Natural Selection upon Man. Throwing off the End of the Working of Natural Selection upon Man. Throwing off the The action of natural selection upon Man has long since been essentially id = 743 author = Godwin, William title = Thoughts on Man, His Nature, Productions and Discoveries Interspersed with Some Particulars Respecting the Author date = keywords = Book; Essay; God; Newton; Shakespear; body; case; certain; day; degree; feel; find; great; human; life; like; love; man; mind; nature; person; place; power; sense; state; subject; thing; time; world summary = The man of reflection will not begin, till he feels his mind the different ways, in which the mind of man may be brought into It has been a vulgar error to imagine, that the mind of man, so far as nature of man, by whom these mighty things have been accomplished, at through the heart." I want to know what passes in the mind of the man to that we ought not quietly to affirm, of the man whose mind nature or things might a man with extraordinary powers effect, were he not hurried man without, consists in the different ways in which their minds are Man can live with little or no leisure, for millions of human beings One man feels his spirits regaled with the sight of those things which active man, engaged in the busy scenes of life, thinks little, and on human nature, or of man, is a very complex thing. id = 44541 author = Haeckel, Ernst title = The Last Link: Our Present Knowledge of the Descent of Man date = keywords = Amphibia; Berlin; Darwin; Evolution; Haeckel; Mammalia; Pithecanthropus; Primates; Professor; Simiæ; Upper; Vertebrata; history; man; year summary = first is entitled ''On the Natural History of the Man-like Apes''; the different views, all agree in one main point: the natural development anatomy concedes to man in the ''natural system'' of animals, for the zoology, there remain three natural groups of Primates--the Lemures, as follows: _The comparative anatomy of all organs of the group of directly the descent of man from ape-like creatures? this now famous ape-like man provoked an animated discussion at the the last twenty years, there exist, indeed, all the connecting forms remark applies to the egg-cell of man himself in its early stages The direct descent of man from some extinct ape-like form is now beyond and after nine years'' labour produced his epoch-making work, ''Ueber following example: The Monera are the lowest living organisms known; Representatives of stages of the ancestral line of man. the transformation from early fish-like creatures to man has come about id = 6430 author = Haeckel, Ernst title = The Evolution of Man — Volume 1 date = keywords = Baer; Darwin; EMBRYO; Hertwig; Wolff; animal; body; cell; chapter; embryonic; figure; form; germinal; layer; man; ovum; primitive; section; theory; vertebrate; yelk summary = important that we find a large number of lower animal forms to be two simple cell-layers (the gastrula), that the gastraea, a form with a simple cell, that divides and subdivides and forms germinal layers, developed in the same way, from tubes formed out of simple layers, did skin-fibre layer); it forms the outer wall of the body (the true skin, The cell-body also consists originally, and in its simplest form, of a cells which form the different tissues of the body; it unites all primitive mouth, s segmentation-cavity, i entoderm (gut-layer), e outer or animal layer, or ectoderm, always forms the chief organs of fish-ovum, these segmentation-cells form a round, lens-shaped disk, primitive gut, a double body-cavity is formed (Figures 1.74 to 1.76). b gut ventral wall, z yelk-cells in the latter, u primitive mouth, o primitive vertebrate form, as we see in Figures 1.98 to 1.102. id = 6710 author = Haeckel, Ernst title = The Evolution of Man — Volume 2 date = keywords = Acrania; Amniotes; Amphibia; Amphioxus; Ascidia; Craniotes; Cyclostoma; EMBRYO; FIGURE; Gegenbaur; HUMAN; Monotremes; Placentals; Selachii; Tunicates; Vermalia; Vertebrates; chapter; evolution; form; low; mammal; man; organ; primitive; section summary = connection with the stem-history of the body-cavity in man and the of the body-cavity in which the sexual organs are subsequently formed. previously formed of the "Primitive Vertebrate" (Figures 1.98 to that this gradual development of the human form from lower animal development of man from some closely-related group of apes, probably the common stem-form of the primitive vertebrate. (floating matter), a number of green cells form a simple layer at the man is closely related to the ape, and belongs to the vertebrate stem; skull, and brain, with further development of the higher sense-organs, classes of Vertebrates, is formed from the five primitive vesicles. development of the gill-clefts which are formed in the gut-wall originally simple gut developing into a variety of organs. section of the gut in man as in the lower Vertebrates; thus there is a developing in the embryo of man and the higher Craniotes (Figures id = 2931 author = Huxley, Thomas Henry title = Evidence as to Man''s Place in Nature date = keywords = Battell; Chimpanzee; Dr.; Gibbons; Gorilla; Mr.; Orang; Pongo; Savage; ape summary = Linnaeus knew nothing, of his own observation, of the man-like Apes of figure of a young "Man of the Woods," or true Orang-Utan, given in he became possessed of an adult Asiatic man-like Ape--the first and the man-like Ape, and with the adult of an Asiatic species--while the Orang, it also became established that the only other man-like Apes in says Dr. Savage (using the term Orang in its old general sense) "to discovered of all the great Apes was the long-sought "Pongo" of Battell. other man-like Ape which inhabits these latitudes--the Chimpanzee--is this great man-like Ape, which has had the singular fortune of being man-like apes: their arms are longer in proportion to their bodies than habitation of the Orang, the Chimpanzee, and the Gorilla, present best known man-like Apes, the Gibbons and Orangs; and to make use of the resemble a man more than an ape, taking great care of his feet, so that id = 2932 author = Huxley, Thomas Henry title = On the Relations of Man to the Lower Animals date = keywords = Chimpanzee; Dog; Gorilla; Man; Mr.; Orang; Owen; Professor; ape; fig summary = shorter, its upper limbs longer in proportion than those of Man. I find that the vertebral column of a full-grown Gorilla, in the Museum much shorter than the spine in the Man. The question now arises how are the other Apes related to the Gorilla of the higher Apes as the latter fall below Man. Thus, even in the important matter of cranial capacity, Men differ more sense a hand: it is a foot which differs from that of man not in differences between the hand and foot of Man and those of the Gorilla the Gorilla than the latter is separated from that of Man. But, in some of the lower apes, the hand and foot diverge still more difference between the Ape''s brain and that of Man, it is necessary that systematically, the cerebral differences of man and apes are not of the structural differences which separate Man from the Gorilla and the id = 2933 author = Huxley, Thomas Henry title = On Some Fossil Remains of Man date = keywords = Dr.; Engis; Professor; bone; neanderthal; skull summary = fragmentary Human skulls from the caves of Engis in the valley of the frontal sinuses in the remarkable skull from the Neanderthal as an "But the human bones and cranium from the Neanderthal exceed all the inwards towards the middle line of the roof of the skull, to form the extreme posterior end of the skull, when the glabello-occipital line great length of the skull, the sagittal suture is remarkably short (4 Neanderthal cranium and certain Australian skulls. of the human cranium, than normally formed skulls of men are known to do Other skulls, such as that of a Negro copied in Fig. 28 from Mr. Busk''s ''Crania typica,'' have a very different, greatly elongated form, So that, at last, in the human skull (Fig. 30), the cerebral The case of the Neanderthal skull is very different. human skulls, the Neanderthal cranium is by no means so isolated as it id = 40257 author = Huxley, Thomas Henry title = Man''s Place in Nature, and Other Essays date = keywords = Apes; Battell; Chimpanzee; Darwin; Dog; Dr.; Fig; Gibbons; Gorilla; Horse; Man; Mr.; Orang; Owen; Pongo; Professor; Savage; Society; Utan; animal; ape; fact; find; form; great; illustration; like; live; nature; skull; specie; time summary = great work, the "Regne Animal," the "Pongo" is classed as a species of characters of the genera and species into which these man-like Apes are best known man-like Apes, the Gibbons and Orangs; and to make use of the place in nature and no real affinity with the lower world of animal of the higher Apes as the latter fall below Man. Thus, even in the important matter of cranial capacity, Men differ more hypothesis regarding the origin of species of animals in general which structural differences, I should have no hesitation in saying that Mr. Darwin had demonstrated the existence of a true physical cause, amply as a matter of fact, that for every species of animal or plant there are that the structural differences between man and the lower animals are of suppose that each species of animal and plant, or each great type of id = 43618 author = Knight, Sherwood Sweet title = Human Life date = keywords = America; Christ; Egypt; Europe; Nile; fact; find; great; human; individual; life; love; man; period; time; year summary = or conditions surrounding man''s existence in times past, is of time equal to no less than twenty-five million years, inasmuch as these THE LENGTH OF TIME DURING WHICH MAN HAS EXISTED THE LENGTH OF TIME DURING WHICH MAN HAS EXISTED period of extreme cold must have existed some one-half million years years ago, there existed a high state of civilization under the old correct, must mean a very great state of antiquity, so far as man is The fact that some living bodies have the power to form life-condition, is to represent the individual''s power over himself the human soul, and even this usually at a time in life when the little there is no other time in life when the human mind will so readily time, and for the reasons above stated, kept man immune from it. fact that, in times past, man has been able to mold the opinions of id = 46379 author = Laing, S. (Samuel) title = Human Origins date = keywords = Abraham; America; Asia; B.C.; Bible; Chaldæa; Deluge; Egypt; Empire; Europe; Genesis; God; Hyksos; King; Manetho; Menes; Miocene; Moses; North; Old; Pliocene; Professor; Quaternary; Sargon; Sea; Testament; accadian; egyptian; evidence; find; great; illustration summary = Dynasties--Summary of Evidence for Date of Menes--Period prior World--Glacial Period in America--Palæolithic Implements--Quaternary years--Neolithic Races--Palæolithic--Different Races of Man as far different races of men and animals were in existence 5000 years ago Dead certainly date from this period, and the great Temple of the gods or kings, who reigned long ago in Egyptian cities. Records--Chaldæa and Egypt give similar results--Historic Period Race--Origin Cappadocia--Great Wars with Egypt--Battle of Race--Origin Cappadocia--Great Wars with Egypt--Battle of latest Assyrian kings, Asshurbanipal, in the year 645 B.C. We have already pointed out the great historical importance of the In fact the state of civilization in Egypt 6000 years ago appears the existence of a very long period of advanced civilization prior great civilized empires of Egypt and Chaldæa during the long interval the old great glacial period is that these conditions were formerly races of historical times and of civilized nations." At the present id = 6335 author = Lyell, Charles, Sir title = The Antiquity of Man date = keywords = Abbeville; Acheul; Alps; America; Amiens; British; Chalk; Crag; Darwin; Dr.; Elephas; England; Europe; FIGURE; France; Geological; Geology; Journal; Lake; London; Man; Mr.; North; Pleistocene; Prestwich; Professor; Rhine; Scotland; Society; Somme; Species; St.; Switzerland; Thames; foot; illustration; number; recent summary = co-existence in ancient times of Man with certain species of mammalia new living species of shells obtained from different parts of the globe period to form so great a thickness as 20 feet. recent species, traced up to a height of 14 feet above the sea by Mr. W.J. Hamilton at Elie, on the southern coast of Fife, is doubtless -PLEISTOCENE PERIOD--BONES OF MAN AND EXTINCT MAMMALIA IN -PLEISTOCENE PERIOD--BONES OF MAN AND EXTINCT MAMMALIA IN It has naturally been asked, if Man co-existed with the extinct species the present valley, we discover an old extinct river-bed covered by no want of bones of mammalia belonging to extinct and living species. remains; but at some points marine shells of Recent species are said to the glacial period, 2000 feet below its present level, and other parts S. Fossil shells of recent species in the drift at this point. id = 35329 author = MacLean, J. P. (John Patterson) title = A Manual of the Antiquity of Man date = keywords = Antiquity; CHAPTER; Dr.; Epoch; France; God; Historic; Lake; Lyell; Man; Professor; Switzerland; bone; buchner; cave; foot; human; illustration summary = Condition of the earth--Numerous traces of Man--Cave of Man of Mentone--Other remains near Mentone--Other bone caves _Glacial Epoch_; that period of the post-tertiary when man was some human bones mingled with the remains of extinct animals. called Kent''s Hole, human bones and flint knives among the remains of found a fragment of a human jaw in the Trou de la Naulette, a bone cave several human bones in beds of Pliocene age, near Savonia, in Liguria. caves of the earth, covering the remains of man along with those of Near the same locality other human bones were discovered Which presented deposit occurred some small bones of living animals and of man, and a and the layer containing human bones was formed at a subsequent time. quantity of human bones, including two skulls--one of an old man, the ashes, flint implements, and the split bones of the cave-bear, reindeer, id = 28471 author = Morris, Charles title = Man And His Ancestor: A Study In Evolution date = keywords = Africa; Bushmen; Europe; Pygmies; Pygmy; animal; ape; development; exist; find; form; great; human; long; low; man; power summary = to be, the existing evidences of a long ancient period of animal life animals, but absent from the higher apes and from man, has not vanished Other evidences of man''s origin in the lower animals could be drawn from The successive stages of man''s mental development, as indicated in the the existing anthropoid apes is the direct ancestor of man. Yet it is doubtful if the man-ape long remained a specially arboreal lower animals, and in all probability from an ape-like ancestor. its powers to the arm and hand of man; while the form, size, and food of The lower animals do not possess the advantage of man in his power of This fact shows its effect in the comparative mental development of man development of the mind from ape to man began. Both ape and man, as we take it, developed through some form of warfare. id = 43728 author = Moss, Arthur B. title = Natural Man date = keywords = God; man; nature; people summary = fairly at the facts of nature; to observe man under various aspects; life with his enemies, the destructive lower animals and his fellow men, and to find in the course of years that a higher form of man has evolved general truth of the Darwinian theory, our idea of the origin of man uncertain sound concerning man''s progress in the world and the means by As a civilised creature man is not many centuries proofs that man many ages ago lived in "holes in the earth," and went man was not depraved by nature is seen by the fact that in the general nor the love of cleanliness is natural to man, but only the capacity of Having then all these bad qualities of nature, how is it that man has They were told that God made man. When the sceptical man had a chance of life, his advance towards id = 30429 author = Mott, Henry A. (Henry Augustus) title = Was Man Created? date = keywords = Animals; Apes; Darwin; FIG; God; Haeckel; Huxley; body; existence; force; form; illustration; life; man; matter; plant summary = the whole life of the plant or animal is that of the cells which compose bodies in matter, form, and force, which led Tyndall[14] to say: existence of matter and force, as also the ultimate cause of all further development shows itself to be a true vertebrate animal, it forms brain above the facial portion of the skull, developed into the man-like form," says Henry Hartshorne,[18] "the universe as it now exists is a a given fact." "The creation of matter, if, indeed," says Haeckel,[24] water that life was possible in any form, as both animals and plants muscles which move the ears of animals are still present in man, but of Animals often resume a form which have not existed for many "For us," says Haeckel, "all nature is animated, _i. UNITY OF THE LIFE SUBSTANCE IN ALL ORGANIC AND ANIMAL BODIES.--"A unity UNITY OF ANIMATE AND INANIMATE NATURE IN MATTER, FORM, AND FORCE. id = 53261 author = Muir, Edwin title = We Moderns: Enigmas and Guesses date = keywords = Christianity; Fall; God; Happiness; Life; Love; Man; Mr.; Nietzsche; Original; Renaissance; Sin; Tragedy; art; great; modern summary = The revolt against conventions in art, thought, life and manners may existence as the tread mill: that is what is meant by Original Sin. And as such it is the great enemy of the Future, the believers in which life contends in these men with their old health, their desire to live modern man; a thousand times more healthy, it is true--perhaps because To the most modern man must have come at some time the thought, What if never cease to read spirit into Life-affirming things, such as pride, lies told out of great love have been creative and life-giving. Renaissance was a newly discovered love of Life and, therefore, of Man? But out of this love of God in Man it created, nevertheless, something If Life is but an expression of creative Love, then a morality founded _Tragedy, Life and Love_ tragedy is the truest expression in art of Life and of Love; for its id = 38145 author = Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm title = Human, All Too Human: A Book for Free Spirits date = keywords = Christian; Schopenhauer; act; feeling; good; great; human; individual; life; man; nature; pain; self; thing; time; world summary = not-feeling: then the world and every thing (Ding) have no interest for man knows can be changed into a purely logical nature. may be far more desirable things in the general happiness of a man, than and present things: therefore, that man is to be made responsible for existence of an individual: [in order to] let man become whatever he =Ethic as Man''s Self-Analysis.=--A good author, whose heart is really in two points of view are sufficient to explain all bad acts done by man to calculable and certain in our experiences, that man is the rule, nature whole feeling is much lightened and man and the world appear together in The man loves himself once more, he feels it--but this very new natural with which man connects the idea of badness and sinfulness (as, comes to look upon himself, after a long life lived naturally, so id = 5173 author = Nukariya, Kaiten title = The Religion of the Samurai A Study of Zen Philosophy and Discipline in China and Japan date = keywords = A.D.; Bodhidharma; Buddha; Buddhism; China; Chinese; Dai; Emperor; Enlightenment; Hinayana; Hwui; Japan; King; Mahayana; Meditation; Muni; Patriarch; Rin; School; Sect; Shakya; Shan; Sixth; Spirit; Universal; Yuen; Zen; life; mind summary = To-day Zen as a living faith can be found in its pure form only among Mahayana Zen, and calls the last by the name of the Buddha''s Holy gives a short life, in Dirghagama-sutra, of each of the six Buddhas, Bodhidharma as the best explanation of Zen, by Gunabhadra in A.D. 433; Saddharma-pundarika-sutra, in its complete form, by Kumarajiva Shan said that some practise Zen in order to attain Enlightenment, founder of the Japanese Ten Dai Sect, known as Den Gyo Dai Shi. After visiting holy places and great monasteries, he came home, This Universal Life, according to Zen, pillars the heaven, Therefore man, according to Zen, is not good-natured nor bad-natured For these reasons Zen proposes to call man Buddha-natured or [FN#190] Zen is often called the Sect of Buddha-mind, as it lays Buddha, or Universal Life conceived by Zen, ''What is life and death?'' ''What is the real nature of mind?'' and so id = 15293 author = Semple, Ellen Churchill title = Influences of Geographic Environment On the Basis of Ratzel''s System of Anthropo-Geography date = keywords = Africa; Alps; America; Asia; Atlantic; Australia; Book; Britain; British; Central; China; East; Empire; England; English; Europe; France; French; Geography; Great; Greece; Gulf; III; Ibid; India; Indians; Islands; Italy; Japan; Lake; London; Mankind; Mediterranean; Mexico; New; Nile; North; Norway; Ocean; Pacific; Races; Ratzel; Ripley; River; Russia; Sea; South; Spain; St.; States; United; Valley; Vol; World; York; european; german; history; roman; sidenote summary = the Indian Ocean--Limitations of small area in enclosed seas--Successive settlements and peoples--Boatman tribes or castes--River islands as population of small thalassic isles--Significant location of island way islands--Economic limitations of their small area--Dense population of like the political state of history, have meant always a group of people nature in many places, by means of valleys, low plains, mountain passes People who early develop powers of expansion, like the English, or [Sidenote: Relation of people and state to political boundary.] geographic conditions like navigable rivers or mountains, which group of peoples," related in race and culture.[566] The great ethnic [Sidenote: River dwellers in populous lands.] [Sidenote: Rivers as intermediaries between land and sea.] [Sidenote: Rivers as boundaries of races and peoples.] [Sidenote: Differentiation of peoples and civilizations on islands.] [Sidenote: Political autonomy of islands based upon area and location.] [Sidenote: Effects of small area in islands.] Like seas, deserts, and other geographical transit regions, mountains id = 50969 author = Wallace, F. L. (Floyd L.) title = Big Ancestor date = keywords = Emmer; Halden; Kelburn; Meredith; Taphetta summary = "It''s more than a legend," said Sam Halden, biologist. "You''re thinking of Earth," said Halden. "I''m complimented that you like our contract so well," said Taphetta, humans hadn''t developed as much as lower races and actually weren''t "Tell me what you know about it," said Halden. "They''re little things." Firmon held out his hands to show how small. "That''s what I don''t like," said Taphetta, curling. they were looking for a special kind of planet, like Earth, because "But I think we have a better one than they did," said the Ribboneer. "I thought so," said Taphetta. "Kelburn." It didn''t sound like a name, the way she said it. "Now you''ll learn why they ran away," said Taphetta. "A new theory," Kelburn said, though it wasn''t, for they _had_ left. They sat down facing it--Taphetta, Kelburn, Meredith, Halden and Taphetta sat on top of the machine, looking like nothing so much as a id = 12699 author = nan title = The Works of Aristotle the Famous Philosopher Containing his Complete Masterpiece and Family Physician; his Experienced Midwife, his Book of Problems and his Remarks on Physiognomy date = keywords = God; SECT; blood; body; cause; chapter; child; doth; drachm; good; great; head; heat; illustration; let; little; nature; seed; time; water; woman; womb summary = For a female child, let the woman lie on her left side, strongly The signs are pains in the lower parts of the body and head, humours, other child, as soon as it comes forth out of the womb, the midwife must As soon as the midwife hath in this manner drawn forth the child, let of the natural and vital blood into the body of the child by its navel; But if the woman be in years with her first child, let her lower parts let the woman drink it very hot, and it will in a little time bring away The right and natural birth is when the child comes with its head first; Though some may think it a natural labour when the child''s head come Now this may proceed from a natural cause, for if the man and woman be