mv: ‘./input-file.zip’ and ‘./input-file.zip’ are the same file Creating study carrel named subject-sociology-gutenberg Initializing database Unzipping Archive: input-file.zip creating: ./tmp/input/input-file/ inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/28496.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/17280.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/18202.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/30610.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/21609.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/833.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/10642.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/6568.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/40744.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/50766.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/metadata.csv caution: excluded filename not matched: *MACOSX* === DIRECTORIES: ./tmp/input === DIRECTORY: ./tmp/input/input-file === metadata file: ./tmp/input/input-file/metadata.csv === found metadata file === updating bibliographic database Building study carrel named subject-sociology-gutenberg FILE: cache/21609.txt OUTPUT: txt/21609.txt FILE: cache/18202.txt OUTPUT: txt/18202.txt FILE: cache/17280.txt OUTPUT: txt/17280.txt FILE: cache/50766.txt OUTPUT: txt/50766.txt FILE: cache/10642.txt OUTPUT: txt/10642.txt FILE: cache/40744.txt OUTPUT: txt/40744.txt FILE: cache/6568.txt OUTPUT: txt/6568.txt FILE: cache/30610.txt OUTPUT: txt/30610.txt FILE: cache/833.txt OUTPUT: txt/833.txt FILE: cache/28496.txt OUTPUT: txt/28496.txt 50766 txt/../pos/50766.pos 50766 txt/../wrd/50766.wrd 40744 txt/../pos/40744.pos 40744 txt/../wrd/40744.wrd 50766 txt/../ent/50766.ent 40744 txt/../ent/40744.ent === file2bib.sh === id: 50766 author: MacLean, Katherine title: The Snowball Effect date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/50766.txt cache: ./cache/50766.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 2 resourceName b'50766.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 40744 author: Dewey, John title: Psychology and Social Practice date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/40744.txt cache: ./cache/40744.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 3 resourceName b'40744.txt' 18202 txt/../ent/18202.ent 18202 txt/../wrd/18202.wrd 18202 txt/../pos/18202.pos === file2bib.sh === id: 18202 author: Withington, William title: The Growth of Thought as Affecting the Progress of Society date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/18202.txt cache: ./cache/18202.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 3 resourceName b'18202.txt' 17280 txt/../pos/17280.pos 10642 txt/../pos/10642.pos 17280 txt/../wrd/17280.wrd 10642 txt/../wrd/10642.wrd 17280 txt/../ent/17280.ent 6568 txt/../pos/6568.pos 10642 txt/../ent/10642.ent 833 txt/../wrd/833.wrd 6568 txt/../wrd/6568.wrd 6568 txt/../ent/6568.ent 833 txt/../pos/833.pos 833 txt/../ent/833.ent 21609 txt/../pos/21609.pos 21609 txt/../wrd/21609.wrd 30610 txt/../pos/30610.pos 21609 txt/../ent/21609.ent === file2bib.sh === id: 17280 author: Marett, R. R. (Robert Ranulph) title: Anthropology date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/17280.txt cache: ./cache/17280.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 4 resourceName b'17280.txt' 30610 txt/../wrd/30610.wrd === file2bib.sh === id: 10642 author: Cram, Ralph Adams title: Towards the Great Peace date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/10642.txt cache: ./cache/10642.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 5 resourceName b'10642.txt' 30610 txt/../ent/30610.ent === file2bib.sh === id: 6568 author: Ellwood, Charles A. (Charles Abram) title: Sociology and Modern Social Problems date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/6568.txt cache: ./cache/6568.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 6 resourceName b'6568.txt' 28496 txt/../pos/28496.pos === file2bib.sh === id: 833 author: Veblen, Thorstein title: The Theory of the Leisure Class date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/833.txt cache: ./cache/833.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 6 resourceName b'833.txt' 28496 txt/../wrd/28496.wrd === file2bib.sh === id: 21609 author: Rowe, Henry K. (Henry Kalloch) title: Society: Its Origin and Development date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/21609.txt cache: ./cache/21609.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 9 resourceName b'21609.txt' 28496 txt/../ent/28496.ent === file2bib.sh === id: 30610 author: Blackmar, Frank W. (Frank Wilson) title: History of Human Society date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/30610.txt cache: ./cache/30610.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 19 resourceName b'30610.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 28496 author: Burgess, E. W. (Ernest Watson) title: Introduction to the Science of Sociology date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/28496.txt cache: ./cache/28496.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 40 resourceName b'28496.txt' Done mapping. Reducing subject-sociology-gutenberg === reduce.pl bib === id = 28496 author = Burgess, E. W. (Ernest Watson) title = Introduction to the Science of Sociology date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 416495 sentences = 28895 flesch = 65 summary = The political process, by which a society or social group formulates its society or social group in inverse relation to the personal values. (g) social organization (primary group life, institutions, sects, individual man, the social will has for any community or society, individual groups varied because of differences in social experience. _Human Nature and the Social Order._ New York, politics from the point of view of human-nature studies.] New York and The terms society, community, and social group are now used by students members, presents a different series of social groupings and the Great society that the members of a social group are organically adapted to sociological sense is the individual who unites in his social relations forming the social nature and ideals of the individual. a member of different societies, communities, and social groups at the types of social groups and studies of individual communities listed in cache = ./cache/28496.txt txt = ./txt/28496.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 30610 author = Blackmar, Frank W. (Frank Wilson) title = History of Human Society date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 171495 sentences = 9279 flesch = 63 summary = Those tribes or nations having a well-developed social order, with Empire developed great powers in government, education, in the arts and The great development of art, literature, philosophy, and politics divide the early culture of man, based upon his development in art into Ages to learn that the power and influence of religion is great in ages of time represented by the geological periods the life of man man the tribes had been fully developed over a great part of the that certain tribes had developed a state of civilization as high as a hypothesis that man started as an individual and developed social life beneficent sea, national life expanded, government and law developed They finally developed in Persia a great national life. arts of civilization and developed a powerful organization, and then independent social life was of great importance in the development of As the other forms and functions of state life developed, feudalism cache = ./cache/30610.txt txt = ./txt/30610.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 21609 author = Rowe, Henry K. (Henry Kalloch) title = Society: Its Origin and Development date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 124437 sentences = 6767 flesch = 62 summary = society leads naturally to the questions: How is this social life wider relations in a world life that is continually growing in social social institutions as the home, the school, the church, and the state socialize the independent units of community life. community lived a self-centred life, because the people manufactured become a social and educational centre for the rural community. and continue to provide social centres of community life because other and working out into the social life of the community; to study the tendencies of social life in both types of community, and the effects the social interests of all the people in the State. of community life, both morally and socially. It is a social life, many individuals working in as large as this in the social life of the American city must be given ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL FUNCTIONS OF THE PEOPLE AS A NATION cache = ./cache/21609.txt txt = ./txt/21609.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 40744 author = Dewey, John title = Psychology and Social Practice date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 7689 sentences = 308 flesch = 50 summary = relation of psychology to the social sciences--and through them to psychological material, adapting it to the needs of education. psychological science, as a study of _mechanism_, is indifferent and Teachers are already possessed by specific psychological assumptions educational purposes; I mean the specialization of aims and habits in psychological theory and the existing school practice becomes painfully ends and problems, through personal selection of means and materials transform a living personality into an objective mechanism for the time question of the relation of psychology to any form of practice. psychology to social practice in general. relations in terms of mechanism that psychology is useful, but because relationship of physics and psychology to practical life is justified. availability of psychology for social practice; because in the school statement of the mechanism, through which the ethical ends are realized, of psychology to social institutions is the only scientific way of cache = ./cache/40744.txt txt = ./txt/40744.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 6568 author = Ellwood, Charles A. (Charles Abram) title = Sociology and Modern Social Problems date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 87403 sentences = 4186 flesch = 60 summary = or aspect of man's social life, and must not be mistaken for society family life and all the altruistic institutions of human society, while higher and more complex types of social organization and the causes of concerning human society has no practical bearing upon present social that the two most important institutions of human society are the family _The Family Life may be regarded as a School for Socializing the institution of human society, that industry and the state must living increased among the native white population in the United States increase of negro population in certain Northern states is, of course, The Social Condition of the Negroes in the United States.--(1) social environment, because we see that negro crime increases in cities per cent of the total negro population of the United States live in at the present it means that economic and social state in which persons cache = ./cache/6568.txt txt = ./txt/6568.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 10642 author = Cram, Ralph Adams title = Towards the Great Peace date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 69478 sentences = 2269 flesch = 51 summary = craft, art, mechanic; a great free society, the proudest product of dominated society for the century preceding the Great War is the result society through industrialism, politics and social life. the world to free the souls of men, this new liberty has worked without A Working Philosophy; The Social Organism; The Industrial and Economic Education and Art; The Problem of Organic Religion; and Personal The world as we know it, man, life itself as it works through all rationalistic materialism--matter and spirit unite in man as body and not profit, the great city becomes a thing of the past, and life is govern wrong, so the social theory held that while a man had a right to life of society is the resultant of two forces; spiritual energy working It is through these that life works and character develops, and Spirit had to be withheld from man until after the human life of God the cache = ./cache/10642.txt txt = ./txt/10642.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 18202 author = Withington, William title = The Growth of Thought as Affecting the Progress of Society date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 16009 sentences = 690 flesch = 62 summary = Aim at managing Self-Love, directed towards Present Goods, vulgarly problem of applying know truth to the present, reconciling self-love them to follow a train of thought, something like this: The life of a Man here presents a singular exception to the general rule of earth's self-love, as the ruling motive of human conduct. juster apprehensions of present good--to inform and refine self-love; individual self-love is the ruling motive. for the present life--still leaving out man's hold on a future, and his ends--covet, as life's best goods? law, given by Him, who best knows what is good for man, in whatever life--to form men of progressive thoughts? As the past age estimated life's supreme good, the enjoyment be more fully recognized, as self-love is educated--as men better become wise for the life that is to come; that self-love never becomes proportion as men rightly estimate life, and truly love themselves, cache = ./cache/18202.txt txt = ./txt/18202.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 50766 author = MacLean, Katherine title = The Snowball Effect date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 5011 sentences = 381 flesch = 81 summary = Wilton Caswell, Ph.D., was head of my Sociology Department, and right going hat in hand, asking politely for money at everyone's door, group--some sort of bounty on new members, a cut of their membership Picture Professor Caswell, head of the Department of Sociology, and and then the meeting of the Watashaw Sewing Circle began. I pointed out to Caswell the member I thought would be the natural If Caswell's equations meant anything at all, we had given that sewing "Caswell, about that sewing club business--I'm beginning to feel the exactly like the one we had given the Watashaw Sewing Circle. All I told Caswell when I got back was that the sewing circle had of charity organizations in Watashaw, changing the club name with each club members _alone_ most of the profit that would come to the town in so many women in Watashaw, and some of them don't like sewing." cache = ./cache/50766.txt txt = ./txt/50766.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 833 author = Veblen, Thorstein title = The Theory of the Leisure Class date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 106753 sentences = 3469 flesch = 46 summary = characteristic feature of leisure class life is a conspicuous exemption leisure class has affected the economic life of later times were taking leisure-class scheme of life, since the household of this pecuniary leisure-class scheme of life here comes to an expression at the second whose tastes have been formed under middle-class habits of life or under shape leisure-class economic life. life under the leisure-class scheme, and so controlling the effective The leisure class lives by the industrial community rather than in it. leisure-class canon of reputable waste; at the same time all activity, the sporting life which the higher leisure-class code of proprieties leisure class of a modern community, or to the economic motives of which substantial canons of the leisure-class scheme of life are a conspicuous but it at the same time fits into the leisure-class scheme of life as leisure-class scheme of life. cache = ./cache/833.txt txt = ./txt/833.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 17280 author = Marett, R. R. (Robert Ranulph) title = Anthropology date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 59639 sentences = 3169 flesch = 70 summary = Anthropology studies man as he occurs at all known times. This means that man must, for certain purposes of science, toe the So far as law and religion will not account for the varieties of social It takes the plain man a long time to find out that it is no use asking as some good authorities believe, there was a kind of man away back other social animal, man, carries on the race by means of some whom It remains to say a word about the types of pre-historic men as judged of palaeolithic man--always supposing that head-form can be taken as round-headed peoples, the so-called Alpine race, which is generally other forms of life except man, can muster on its side a certain amount word to express all the externals of the life of man in society, so Man: A History of the Human Body. cache = ./cache/17280.txt txt = ./txt/17280.txt Building ./etc/reader.txt 28496 21609 30610 28496 6568 21609 number of items: 10 sum of words: 1,064,409 average size in words: 106,440 average readability score: 61 nouns: life; man; society; people; time; group; men; nature; family; community; development; class; world; government; way; history; progress; sense; form; individual; part; fact; place; power; process; conditions; state; law; race; individuals; character; groups; case; civilization; population; religion; system; education; organization; mind; hand; order; city; study; forms; science; self; means; years; classes verbs: is; are; be; was; have; has; were; been; had; do; made; does; make; become; being; find; found; say; come; said; given; take; called; see; became; give; developed; did; taken; seems; came; show; becomes; used; brought; makes; go; seen; know; seem; known; put; born; comes; established; based; having; live; according; increased adjectives: social; other; human; great; such; same; many; new; certain; own; economic; more; different; modern; common; general; first; political; individual; good; industrial; natural; large; public; religious; physical; present; true; possible; old; little; whole; personal; much; moral; primitive; higher; few; necessary; important; early; mental; -; small; most; high; greater; various; least; scientific adverbs: not; so; more; only; even; as; also; most; very; up; well; then; far; out; now; however; thus; therefore; still; less; rather; here; always; much; together; often; especially; perhaps; on; first; just; already; indeed; never; too; again; down; yet; long; all; merely; once; almost; no; there; sometimes; frequently; about; finally; ever pronouns: it; they; their; its; we; his; he; them; our; i; itself; him; us; themselves; you; her; himself; my; she; me; one; your; ourselves; myself; herself; thy; ours; yourself; oneself; theirs; mine; thyself; thee; yours; hers; ye; pp; him!--not; au; ''s proper nouns: _; new; york; social; states; united; europe; london; w.; pp; american; j.; america; h.; england; e.; god; c.; john; g.; b.; f.; a.; m.; sociology; negro; france; l.; chap; charles; rome; de; paris; south; s.; william; progress; greeks; r.; great; journal; english; war; society; human; life; t.; boston; law; la keywords: life; europe; united; states; social; new; man; society; south; people; individual; history; great; god; english; england; american; york; work; western; university; study; sociology; roman; religion; reformation; race; psychology; problem; north; negro; middle; john; human; group; good; france; family; dr.; community; christian; chapter; america; ages; william; west; way; watashaw; war; type one topic; one dimension: social file(s): ./cache/17280.txt titles(s): Anthropology three topics; one dimension: social; social; life file(s): ./cache/28496.txt, ./cache/21609.txt, ./cache/30610.txt titles(s): Introduction to the Science of Sociology | Society: Its Origin and Development | History of Human Society five topics; three dimensions: social new life; social life people; life class leisure; wagon september cars; wagon september cars file(s): ./cache/28496.txt, ./cache/30610.txt, ./cache/833.txt, ./cache/50766.txt, ./cache/50766.txt titles(s): Introduction to the Science of Sociology | History of Human Society | The Theory of the Leisure Class | The Snowball Effect | The Snowball Effect Type: gutenberg title: subject-sociology-gutenberg date: 2021-06-10 time: 13:06 username: emorgan patron: Eric Morgan email: emorgan@nd.edu input: facet_subject:"Sociology" ==== make-pages.sh htm files ==== make-pages.sh complex files ==== make-pages.sh named enities ==== making bibliographics id: 30610 author: Blackmar, Frank W. (Frank Wilson) title: History of Human Society date: words: 171495 sentences: 9279 pages: flesch: 63 cache: ./cache/30610.txt txt: ./txt/30610.txt summary: Those tribes or nations having a well-developed social order, with Empire developed great powers in government, education, in the arts and The great development of art, literature, philosophy, and politics divide the early culture of man, based upon his development in art into Ages to learn that the power and influence of religion is great in ages of time represented by the geological periods the life of man man the tribes had been fully developed over a great part of the that certain tribes had developed a state of civilization as high as a hypothesis that man started as an individual and developed social life beneficent sea, national life expanded, government and law developed They finally developed in Persia a great national life. arts of civilization and developed a powerful organization, and then independent social life was of great importance in the development of As the other forms and functions of state life developed, feudalism id: 28496 author: Burgess, E. W. (Ernest Watson) title: Introduction to the Science of Sociology date: words: 416495 sentences: 28895 pages: flesch: 65 cache: ./cache/28496.txt txt: ./txt/28496.txt summary: The political process, by which a society or social group formulates its society or social group in inverse relation to the personal values. (g) social organization (primary group life, institutions, sects, individual man, the social will has for any community or society, individual groups varied because of differences in social experience. _Human Nature and the Social Order._ New York, politics from the point of view of human-nature studies.] New York and The terms society, community, and social group are now used by students members, presents a different series of social groupings and the Great society that the members of a social group are organically adapted to sociological sense is the individual who unites in his social relations forming the social nature and ideals of the individual. a member of different societies, communities, and social groups at the types of social groups and studies of individual communities listed in id: 10642 author: Cram, Ralph Adams title: Towards the Great Peace date: words: 69478 sentences: 2269 pages: flesch: 51 cache: ./cache/10642.txt txt: ./txt/10642.txt summary: craft, art, mechanic; a great free society, the proudest product of dominated society for the century preceding the Great War is the result society through industrialism, politics and social life. the world to free the souls of men, this new liberty has worked without A Working Philosophy; The Social Organism; The Industrial and Economic Education and Art; The Problem of Organic Religion; and Personal The world as we know it, man, life itself as it works through all rationalistic materialism--matter and spirit unite in man as body and not profit, the great city becomes a thing of the past, and life is govern wrong, so the social theory held that while a man had a right to life of society is the resultant of two forces; spiritual energy working It is through these that life works and character develops, and Spirit had to be withheld from man until after the human life of God the id: 40744 author: Dewey, John title: Psychology and Social Practice date: words: 7689 sentences: 308 pages: flesch: 50 cache: ./cache/40744.txt txt: ./txt/40744.txt summary: relation of psychology to the social sciences--and through them to psychological material, adapting it to the needs of education. psychological science, as a study of _mechanism_, is indifferent and Teachers are already possessed by specific psychological assumptions educational purposes; I mean the specialization of aims and habits in psychological theory and the existing school practice becomes painfully ends and problems, through personal selection of means and materials transform a living personality into an objective mechanism for the time question of the relation of psychology to any form of practice. psychology to social practice in general. relations in terms of mechanism that psychology is useful, but because relationship of physics and psychology to practical life is justified. availability of psychology for social practice; because in the school statement of the mechanism, through which the ethical ends are realized, of psychology to social institutions is the only scientific way of id: 6568 author: Ellwood, Charles A. (Charles Abram) title: Sociology and Modern Social Problems date: words: 87403 sentences: 4186 pages: flesch: 60 cache: ./cache/6568.txt txt: ./txt/6568.txt summary: or aspect of man''s social life, and must not be mistaken for society family life and all the altruistic institutions of human society, while higher and more complex types of social organization and the causes of concerning human society has no practical bearing upon present social that the two most important institutions of human society are the family _The Family Life may be regarded as a School for Socializing the institution of human society, that industry and the state must living increased among the native white population in the United States increase of negro population in certain Northern states is, of course, The Social Condition of the Negroes in the United States.--(1) social environment, because we see that negro crime increases in cities per cent of the total negro population of the United States live in at the present it means that economic and social state in which persons id: 50766 author: MacLean, Katherine title: The Snowball Effect date: words: 5011 sentences: 381 pages: flesch: 81 cache: ./cache/50766.txt txt: ./txt/50766.txt summary: Wilton Caswell, Ph.D., was head of my Sociology Department, and right going hat in hand, asking politely for money at everyone''s door, group--some sort of bounty on new members, a cut of their membership Picture Professor Caswell, head of the Department of Sociology, and and then the meeting of the Watashaw Sewing Circle began. I pointed out to Caswell the member I thought would be the natural If Caswell''s equations meant anything at all, we had given that sewing "Caswell, about that sewing club business--I''m beginning to feel the exactly like the one we had given the Watashaw Sewing Circle. All I told Caswell when I got back was that the sewing circle had of charity organizations in Watashaw, changing the club name with each club members _alone_ most of the profit that would come to the town in so many women in Watashaw, and some of them don''t like sewing." id: 17280 author: Marett, R. R. (Robert Ranulph) title: Anthropology date: words: 59639 sentences: 3169 pages: flesch: 70 cache: ./cache/17280.txt txt: ./txt/17280.txt summary: Anthropology studies man as he occurs at all known times. This means that man must, for certain purposes of science, toe the So far as law and religion will not account for the varieties of social It takes the plain man a long time to find out that it is no use asking as some good authorities believe, there was a kind of man away back other social animal, man, carries on the race by means of some whom It remains to say a word about the types of pre-historic men as judged of palaeolithic man--always supposing that head-form can be taken as round-headed peoples, the so-called Alpine race, which is generally other forms of life except man, can muster on its side a certain amount word to express all the externals of the life of man in society, so Man: A History of the Human Body. id: 21609 author: Rowe, Henry K. (Henry Kalloch) title: Society: Its Origin and Development date: words: 124437 sentences: 6767 pages: flesch: 62 cache: ./cache/21609.txt txt: ./txt/21609.txt summary: society leads naturally to the questions: How is this social life wider relations in a world life that is continually growing in social social institutions as the home, the school, the church, and the state socialize the independent units of community life. community lived a self-centred life, because the people manufactured become a social and educational centre for the rural community. and continue to provide social centres of community life because other and working out into the social life of the community; to study the tendencies of social life in both types of community, and the effects the social interests of all the people in the State. of community life, both morally and socially. It is a social life, many individuals working in as large as this in the social life of the American city must be given ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL FUNCTIONS OF THE PEOPLE AS A NATION id: 833 author: Veblen, Thorstein title: The Theory of the Leisure Class date: words: 106753 sentences: 3469 pages: flesch: 46 cache: ./cache/833.txt txt: ./txt/833.txt summary: characteristic feature of leisure class life is a conspicuous exemption leisure class has affected the economic life of later times were taking leisure-class scheme of life, since the household of this pecuniary leisure-class scheme of life here comes to an expression at the second whose tastes have been formed under middle-class habits of life or under shape leisure-class economic life. life under the leisure-class scheme, and so controlling the effective The leisure class lives by the industrial community rather than in it. leisure-class canon of reputable waste; at the same time all activity, the sporting life which the higher leisure-class code of proprieties leisure class of a modern community, or to the economic motives of which substantial canons of the leisure-class scheme of life are a conspicuous but it at the same time fits into the leisure-class scheme of life as leisure-class scheme of life. id: 18202 author: Withington, William title: The Growth of Thought as Affecting the Progress of Society date: words: 16009 sentences: 690 pages: flesch: 62 cache: ./cache/18202.txt txt: ./txt/18202.txt summary: Aim at managing Self-Love, directed towards Present Goods, vulgarly problem of applying know truth to the present, reconciling self-love them to follow a train of thought, something like this: The life of a Man here presents a singular exception to the general rule of earth''s self-love, as the ruling motive of human conduct. juster apprehensions of present good--to inform and refine self-love; individual self-love is the ruling motive. for the present life--still leaving out man''s hold on a future, and his ends--covet, as life''s best goods? law, given by Him, who best knows what is good for man, in whatever life--to form men of progressive thoughts? As the past age estimated life''s supreme good, the enjoyment be more fully recognized, as self-love is educated--as men better become wise for the life that is to come; that self-love never becomes proportion as men rightly estimate life, and truly love themselves, ==== make-pages.sh questions ==== make-pages.sh search ==== make-pages.sh topic modeling corpus Zipping study carrel