Automated Text Analysis of Political Scientists 

       

 This is a volume of 100 essays by political scientists, each with less than about 1,000 words concerning one novel or insufficiently appreciated idea in some area of the discipline (edited by me, Kay Scholzman, and Norman Nie, and in honor of Sidney Verba).  (I  might  have heard a rumor that if you buy two copies, your next article will be accepted on the first round and you'll get a great new job offer!) In any event, the last blurb above says nice things about the organization of the essays, which of course we appreciate, but I especially like that the essays, except for a little fine tuning, were ordered via automated text analysis (using an algorithm Justin Grimmer and I are working on).  The number of possible orderings of 100 essays is enormous of course -- a tad less than the number of elementary particles in the universe  squared  -- and the idea that a "mere" human being can choose an optimal ordering is absurd.  We've become accustomed to understanding that computers can do arithmetic far faster than we, but we also need to start to get use to the fact that (with some help from modern statistics) they can also "read" better than us too.