15 Metaphors for analysis

A perfect analysis of the language is a great desideratum.

Analysis of sentences is a central and essential matter in the teaching or the study of grammar; but the truest and the most important of the sentential analyses is parsing; which, because it is a method distinguished by a technical name of its own, is not commonly denominated analysis.

But this mistake might reveal the important fact that all analysis was a choice, and inspired by volitions.

Lastly, his latest avowed production, the 'Analysis of the Phenomena of the Human Mind,' is a model of perspicuous exposition of complex states of consciousness, carried farther than by any other author before him; and illustrating the fulness which such exposition may be made to attain, by one who has faith in the comprehensive principle of association, and has learnt the secret of tracing out its innumerable windings.

11.Greene's Analysis is the most expanded form of the Third Method above.

A Marxist analysis of the 1927 events is Manabendra Nath Roy, Revolution and Counter-Revolution in China, Calcutta 1946; the relevant documents are translated in C. Brandt, B. Schwartz, J.K. Fairbank, A Documentary History of Chinese Communism, Cambridge, Mass., 1952.

Says Lewes: "Analysis, as insisted on by Plato, is the decomposition of the whole into its separate parts,is seeing the one in many....

Analysis is one thing, creation is another," she said.

An analysis of the plot is but a summary of conversations.

The best analysis of denshiring in the Far East is still the book by K.J. Pelzer, Population and Land Utilization, New York 1941.

But analysis is not the business of the poet.

The analysis and description of campaigns and battles is an unattractive task to him; but the personal delineation of a good and great man, even in his lesser and more familiar traits, is a pleasing reliefa portion of his subject upon which he delights to linger.

If the preceding analysis, or something resembling it, be not the correct account of the notion of justice; if justice be totally independent of utility, and be a standard per se, which the mind can recognize by simple introspection of itself; it is hard to understand why that internal oracle is so ambiguous, and why so many things appear either just or unjust, according to the light in which they are regarded.

Too much analysis is death to unmitigated rapture.

Analyses of the Arcadia will be fouud in all works upon the novel from Dunlop to J. J. Jusserand and W. Raleigh.

15 Metaphors for  analysis