Tag Archives: Books

How "great" are the great books?

Please help my friend, Eric Lease Morgan, with his research. This looks very interesting.

From Eric:

In an attempt to validate a mathematical model of mine I have implemented a crowd sourcing survey addressing the question, “How ‘great’ are the Great Books?”. [1]

In 1952 Robert Hutchins and friends edited a set of books called The Great Books of the Western World. [2] According to Hutchins, the items of the set were selected for their ability to discuss Mortimer Adler’s 102 “great ideas” (art, cause, fate, government, judgement, law, medicine, physics, religion, slavery, truth, wisdom, etc.). By reading the books and discussing them with fellow readers, one was expected to further and enhance their liberal arts education. Think of it as “life long learning” for the 1950s.

Using a variation of the venerable TFIDF (term frequency, inverse document frequency) algorithm, I have attempted to measure the “greatness” of the Great Books. In an effort to validate the model, I am soliciting as many people’s input as possible. I’m shooting for 100,000. If the results match the model, then I may be able to say the model represents reality. Interesting!?

The survey is really simple. A random idea is selected from the “great ideas”. Two books are randomly selected from the Great Books. The poll-taker is then asked to choose the book they consider “greater”. After the question is answered the process is repeated. Apparently this voting process is called the Condorcet Method. [3] (“Thanks Andreas.”)

Please consider answering the survey at least ten times. It will take you less than sixty seconds. Don’t think too hard about the questions because there are no wrong answers. If you go so far as to take the survey 100 times, then you might get an idea of the sorts of books from the Great Books you consider… great. For a more thorough introduction to the survey, see the introductory blog posting. [4]

Fun!?

[1] survey – http://bit.ly/bPQHIg
[2] Great Books – http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1074025
[3] Condorcet method – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Condorcet_method
[4] blog posting – http://bit.ly/cRNg1t

Posted via email from Bill Drew – BabyBoomer Librarian

My NPR debut? #1B1T

My debut on NPR All Things Considered was pulled today because of other breaking news. It is currently rescheduled for tomorrow. My 15 minutes or less of fame is now overdue. Such is the cost of fame.

I was interviewed by Laura Sydell for a segment on One Book, One Twitter effort to have an international Big Read this summer. You can read about it at http://bit.ly/aJbw2G and more at http://www.crowdsourcing.com/cs/2010/04/voting-for-one-book-one-twitter-extended-by-one-day.html.

Why not participate and see what happens?

—————————————–

Wilfred (Bill) Drew, M.S., B.S., A.S.

Assistant Professor

Librarian, Systems and Tech Services/Electronic Resources/Serials

Tompkins Cortland Community College (TC3) Library:

http://www.tc3.edu/library/

Dryden, N.Y. 13053-0139

Follow the library: http://twitter.com/TC3Library

E-mail: dreww@tc3.edu

Phone: 607-844-8222 ext.4406

AIM/SKYPE/Twitter:BillDrew4

Online Identity: http://claimID.com/billdrew

Strengths: Ideation, Input, Learner, Command, Analytical

http://www.facebook.com/people/Bill_Drew/

PPlease consider the environment before printing this e-mail or document.

My favorite Classics – Books and Authors

How does one define a classic book? I could say anything that was required reading in school, I suppose. I graduated from high school in 1969. The problem with that is all of the books I have read over the years tend to run into together as to when I read them and for what original purpose. So here is what is basically a brain dump of my favorite classics (pre 1950) not in any order:

  • H. Rider Haggard – Cleopatra. She. King Solomon’s mines. Allan Quatermain. Maiwa’s revenge.
  • Jules Verne – everything he wrote.
  • H.G. Wells – Time Machine, War of the Worlds, The Outline of History, Invisible Man, many of his more obscure titles.
  • J.R.R. Tolkien – everything
  • Robert Louis Stevenson – Treasure Island, Kidnapped, and more
  • Rudyard Kipling – My favorite is Captains Courageous but I like Jungle Book and many others.
  • Edgar Allan Poe – his horror and detective novels
  • Sir Arthur Conan Doyle – Sherlock Holmes and his science fiction novels
  • Alexander Dumas – Three Musketeers
  • Charles Dickens – Nickolas Nickelby is my favorite, also love David Copperfield and Tale of Two Cities.
  • Emily Bronte – Wuthering Heights
  • Bram Stoker – Dracula
  • Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley – Frankenstein
  • Mark Twain – everything, especially A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court.
  • Daniel Defoe – Robinson Crusoe
  • Johnathan Swift — Gulliver’s Travels

That’s all I can think of for now.

,

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Books

Don’t take too long to think about it: fifteen books you’ve read that will always stick with you. Give yourself 15 minutes for recall. Tag 15 friends, including me. (this list is in no particular order of importance, btw).


  1. Stranger in a Strange Land
  2. Flatland
  3. Illiad
  4. The Time Machine
  5. War of the Worlds
  6. Rainbows End
  7. Around the World in 80 Days
  8. Childhoods End
  9. Odyssey
  10. The Complete Sherlock Holmes
  11. The Cat in the Hat
  12. Canterbury Tales
  13. Le Morte D’Arthur (translated to english)
  14. The Crystal Cave
  15. That Hideous Strength



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Nearest Book Meme

Rules:
* Get the book nearest to you. Right now.
* Go to page 56.
* Find the 5th sentence.
* Write this sentence – either here or on your blog.
* Copy these instructions as commentary of your sentence.
* Don’t look for your favorite book or your coolest but really the nearest.


“However, these are matters of style and preference that are definitely not set in stone, and it’s a good idea no to get fixated on them.” — Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero tolerance approach to Punctuation! by Lynne Truss.

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