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Literary notes about types (AI summary)

Throughout these works, the word “types” appears in a variety of contexts to denote categories, classifications, and exemplars. It can refer to distinct products—like Jamaica’s “two distinct types of coffee” [1]—or symbolic forms, such as “spiritual types” in discussions of good and evil [2]. In other cases, authors apply it to human traits—for instance, contrasting Puritan figures as “two extreme types” [3] or distinguishing among “two types of Methodist” [4]. Still elsewhere, “types” helps structure scientific or psychological inquiry—whether classifying “types of reproduction” in witness testimony [5] or delineating “different types of delusions” [6]. Across all these diverse sources, “types” underpins a recurring literary and scholarly practice of grouping ideas or objects into meaningful sets.
  1. Jamaica produces two distinct types of coffee, the highland and the lowland growths.
    — from All About Coffee by William H. Ukers
  2. From him emanated two Ferouers, spiritual types, which took form in two beings, Ormuzd and Ahriman.
    — from Demonology and Devil-lore by Moncure Daniel Conway
  3. In Hudibras and Ralpho the two extreme types of the Puritan party, Presbyterians and Independents, are mercilessly ridiculed.
    — from English Literature by William J. Long
  4. He knew but two types of Methodist—the ecstatic and the bilious.
    — from Adam Bede by George Eliot
  5. Concerning the testimony of witnesses, its nature and value, concerning memory, and the types of reproduction, there is now a considerable literature.
    — from Criminal Psychology: A Manual for Judges, Practitioners, and Students by Hans Gross
  6. We know such system formation not only from the dream, but also from phobias, from compulsive thinking and from the types of delusions.
    — from Totem and Taboo by Sigmund Freud

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