In both the Iliad and the Odyssey there are many mentions of "inward meats" such as
When the thigh-bones were burned and they had tasted the inward meats.
Are the inward meats the organ meats, meat close to the bones, or something else?
For my data science class, I'm supposed to examine a dataset that has at least 400 records and do either some data analysis or some machine learning task. Is there anything I could do with data from LitSE? I'd need a csv or similar of whatever data. For example, if we want to look at what questions are likely to be answered, that could be an interesting clustering problem.
Or to see what causes a question to go HNQ, not just in the sense we already know (recent q with lots of upvotes on multiple answers) but in terms of characteristics of the questions.
But I don't know whether the dataset of all 6000+ LitSE questions and answers is available for download in a format that is easily machine-readable
including all relevant info like how many upvotes, whether it went HNQ, what the tags were, what time (UTC) it was posted, where from, etc.
I have at least one other project idea in mind but thought I'd check in here ...
In Marek Hłasko's The Graveyard (set in communist-occupied Poland) there is a scene where, in a political party meeting, it is revealed that one of the party members (Nowak) is forced to change the name of his dog. This is met with uproar from the rest of the members and Nowak is forced to change...
In Bethan Roberts' 2012 novel My Policeman, Marion Taylor begins working as a schoolteacher in 1957. She writes her name on the chalkboard for her students:
A moment passed as I gathered myself, then the chalk touched the slate and began to form letters; there was that lovely, echoey sound—so de...
Literature Stack Exchange will begin the nomination stage for an election on March 28, as your “graduation” election!
The timeline:
On March 21, we'll post a question collection post on Meta, so that the community can post questions they'd like to see the candidates answer.
Starting on March 28...
@verbose you can download the query results as text. you can't download the whole dataset. there are the periodic archives that Mithical links to, and those work, I've used them, but note that they are made less frequently than the updates on data.stackexchange.com, so if you want more up to date then you have to suffer with data explorer
eg. I used the downloaded archive for the search at scifi.meta.stackexchange.com/a/13626/4918 , because it would be hard to coax the MS SQL server at data.SE to do that
Ok, maybe you could use the SQL server for it, but anyway, the download just allows you more convenient local experimentation, as long as you're ok with it being less up to date.
I first heard the term in a lecture on neo-Nazism. The phrase "Crisis of Modernity" doesn't have a Wikipedia page but del Noce, who wrote a book called The Crisis of Modernity, does.
Having a bad literary day today trying to learn more about Lost in the Funhouse. There are times I feel I need to unlearn all my years of scientific education to be able to think "loosely" enough to do well with books. How on earth do people find all these cunning little allusions and connections?!
C. L. Polk's Kingston Cycle has the immortal Amaranthines, powerful magical beings who live in the afterlife. (Specifically, they rule in the Solace, which is where human souls go after death.) They're subjects of myths and legends. Throughout the trilogy they are variously referred to as "Amaran...
I was reading the book "The Code Book" by Simon Singh.
An excerpt from the book is as follows
The obsession began in 1800, when the French mathematician Jean-Baptiste Fourier, who had been one of Napoleon’s original Pekinese dogs, introduced the ten-year-old Champollion to his collection of Egyp...
@Tsundoku can't we just say "yes'm". Could be Mr, Ms, Mrs, Miss, Mx, Maître, Monsieur, Madam, Ma'am, Maîtresse, Mademoiselle, Madame, Monseigneur, Mommy, etc
Books printed in Europe before 1501 are known as incunables. Many of the works that appeared in print before 1501 were religious (e.g. missals) or academic. The majority of texts were in Latin. According to the French Wikipedia article incunable,
Des 30 000 incunables répertoriés, 21 000 sont éc...