Technics and CivilizationHarcourt, Brace, 1934 - 495 pages |
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Page 170
... industry : Agricola makes mention of them , and they remain to this day one of the most durable attributes of the mining economy . But with the new concentration of industry in the industrial city there was still a third source of ...
... industry : Agricola makes mention of them , and they remain to this day one of the most durable attributes of the mining economy . But with the new concentration of industry in the industrial city there was still a third source of ...
Page 171
... industry and pushing this to the exclusion of every other form of art and work . Thus England , the home of the new specialization , turned all its resources and energy and man - power into mechanical industry and permitted agriculture ...
... industry and pushing this to the exclusion of every other form of art and work . Thus England , the home of the new specialization , turned all its resources and energy and man - power into mechanical industry and permitted agriculture ...
Page 229
... industries , while workers who supervise them must have similar capacities to those at the remote control boards of a power station or a steamship . Here , as in neotechnic industry generally , advances in production increase the number ...
... industries , while workers who supervise them must have similar capacities to those at the remote control boards of a power station or a steamship . Here , as in neotechnic industry generally , advances in production increase the number ...
Table des matières
Space Distance Movement | 3 |
The Influence of Capitalism | 4 |
From Fable to Fact | 5 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
A. N. Whitehead abstract achieve advance agriculture arts automatic basis became become blast furnace capitalism capitalist civilization classes clock coal complete consumption created culture Deutsches Museum devices duction economy effective efficiency effort eighteenth century electric elements energy England environment esthetic Europe existence experience exploitation fact factory finally forms function glass habits handicraft horsepower human important improvements increased industry instruments interests invention inventor iron J. A. Hobson labor limited living machine manufacture means mechanical ment merely metal methods mining modern technics motion movement nature neolithic neotechnic phase nineteenth century object operations organic original paleotechnic period paleotechnic phase perhaps phonograph physical picture population possible primitive production railroad rational régime regions Roger Bacon routine scientific seventeenth century sixteenth century social society standard steam engine tended textile tion transportation utilitarian utilization water turbine whole wood worker