... with any of the said elementary parts after a short probation, and may be transferred from one to another, on any emergency, at the discretion of the master, Such translations are utterly at variance with the old practice of the division of labour... Railway Locomotives and Cars - Page 441838Full view - About this book
| Andrew Ure - Factory system - 1835 - 520 pages
...master, Such translations are utterly at variance with the old practice of the division of labour, which fixed one man to shaping the head of a pin,...operation, which required unremitting dexterity and diligence, his hand and eye were constantly on the strain, or if they were suffered to swerve from... | |
| George Savage White - Cotton - 1836 - 508 pages
...apparatus a precision of action, equal, if not superior, to the skill of the most experienced journeyman. It was indeed a subject of regret, to observe how...operation, which required unremitting • dexterity and diligence, his hand and eye were constantly on the strain, or if they were suffered to swerve ftom... | |
| George Savage White - Cotton - 1836 - 636 pages
...apparatus a precision of action, equal, if not superior, to the skill of the most experienced journeyman. It was indeed a subject of regret, to observe how...comfort. To one unvaried operation, which required unremittingdexterity and diligence, his hand and eye were constantly on the strain, or if they were... | |
| Industrial arts - 1838 - 348 pages
...cu: any emergency, at the discretion of the master. Such translations are utterly at variance with the old practice of the division of labor, which fixed...shaping the head of a pin, and another to sharpening iti point, with most irksome and spirit-wasting uniformity, for a whole life. It was indeed a subject... | |
| Andrew Ure - Political Science - 1967 - 504 pages
...master. Such translations are utterly at variance with the old practice of the division of labour, which fixed one man to shaping the head of a pin,...operation, which required unremitting dexterity and diligence, his hand and eye were constantly on the strain, or if they were suffered to swerve from... | |
| Herman E. Daly - Business & Economics - 1994 - 548 pages
...of Manufacturers (\ 1835l 1967). He saw the problem with the mode of production described by Smith: "It was indeed a subject of regret to observe how...comfort. To one unvaried operation, which required un3 This table appears in Babbage, p. 184, and is reproduced in Braverman 1974, p. 80. Table 16.1 remitting... | |
| Guang-Zhen Sun - Business & Economics - 2005 - 312 pages
...another, on any emergency, at the discretion of the master. Such translations are utterly at variance with the old practice of the division of labor, which fixed...operation, which required unremitting dexterity and diligence, his hand and eye were constantly on the strain, or if they were suffered to swerve from... | |
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