| Andrew Ure - 1835 - 504 sivua
...physico-mechanical combination, while the other seldom knows anything beyond the pin-head sphere of his daily task. It is, in fact, the constant aim and tendency of every...that of ordinary labourers, for trained artisans. In most of the water-twist, or throstle cotton mills, the spinning is entirely managed by females of... | |
| P. Gaskell - 1836 - 436 sivua
...abstractions of the theorist. " It is in fact the constant aim and tendency of every improvement ki machinery to supersede human labour altogether, or...and children for that of men, or that of ordinary labourer's for trained artisans." — P. 23. " This tendency to employ merely children' with watchful... | |
| P. Gaskell - 1836 - 456 sivua
...from toil, and, in many cases, increased the wages earned by him, they have not looked beyond that. " It is, in fact, the constant aim and tendency of every...human labour altogether, or to diminish its cost, y by substituting the industry of women and children for that of men, or that of ordinary labourers... | |
| 1838 - 712 sivua
...physico-mechanical combination, while the other seldom knows anything beyond the pin-head sphere of his daily task. It is, in fact, the constant aim and tendency of every improvement in machinery to supersede human labor altogether, or to diminish its cost, by substituting the industry of women and children for that... | |
| 1838 - 348 sivua
...combination, while the other seldom knows anything beyond the pin-head sphere of his daily task. Jt is, in fact, the constant aim and tendency of every improvement in machinery to supersede human labor altogether, or to diminish its cost, by substitutmg the industry of women and children for that... | |
| Olive Jocelyn Dunlop, Richard Douglas Denman - 1912 - 396 sivua
...one of the chief merits of machinery lay in the fact that it tended to diminish the cost of labour " by substituting the industry of women and children...for that of men ; or that of ordinary labourers for that of trained artisans." r It is, perhaps, hardly necessary to point out what he overlooked, that... | |
| Olive Jocelyn Dunlop, Richard Douglas Denman - 1912 - 402 sivua
...machinery lay in the fact that it tended to diminish the cost of labour " by substituting the industry oi women and children for that of men ; or that of ordinary labourers for that of trained artisans." « It is, perhaps, hardly necessary to point out what he overlooked, that... | |
| William James Ashley - 1922 - 36 sivua
...science, to reduce the task of his work-people to the exercise of vigilance and dexterity/ . . . flt is, in fact, the constant aim and tendency of every...that of ordinary labourers, for trained artisans/ ... ' The scholastic dogma of the division of labour into degrees of skill has been exploded by our... | |
| Emery Edward Neff - 1926 - 456 sivua
...dexterity, — faculties, when concentred to one process, speedily brought to perfection in the young. ... It is, in fact, the constant aim and tendency of every improvement in machinery to supersede human labor altogether, or to diminish its cost, by substituting the industry of women and children for that... | |
| 236 sivua
...production but on the automatic plan, skilled labour gets progressively superseded . . .'. And again, 'it is, in fact, the constant aim and tendency of...supersede human labour altogether, or to diminish its costs, by substituting the industry of women and children for that of men; of that of ordinary labourers,... | |
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