Technics and CivilizationHarcourt, Brace, 1934 - 495 pages |
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Page 93
... production but of ideal consumption under the machine system ] Mark the effect of the large standing armies of the seventeenth century , and the even larger conscript armies whose success in France during the Revolution was to be so ...
... production but of ideal consumption under the machine system ] Mark the effect of the large standing armies of the seventeenth century , and the even larger conscript armies whose success in France during the Revolution was to be so ...
Page 226
... production and is to be preferred over a branch . ” And again Ford says : " In our first experimenting ... we thought that we had to have the machine lines with their assembly and also the final assembly all under one roof , but as we ...
... production and is to be preferred over a branch . ” And again Ford says : " In our first experimenting ... we thought that we had to have the machine lines with their assembly and also the final assembly all under one roof , but as we ...
Page 228
... production and automatic machines have steadily been diminishing the worker's importance in factory production . Two million workers were cast out between 1919 and 1929 in the United States , while production itself actually increased ...
... production and automatic machines have steadily been diminishing the worker's importance in factory production . Two million workers were cast out between 1919 and 1929 in the United States , while production itself actually increased ...
Table des matières
CULTURAL PREPARATION | 9 |
AGENTS OF MECHANIZATION | 60 |
THE EOTECHNIC PHASE | 107 |
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 economic effective efficiency effort eighteenth century electric elements Encyclopédie energy England environment eotechnic period esthetic Europe existence experience exploitation fact factory finally forms function glass handicraft horsepower human important improvements increased instruments interests invention inventor iron J. A. Hobson labor limited living London machine manufacture means mechanical ment merely metal methods mining modern technics motion movement nature neolithic neotechnic phase nineteenth century operations organic original paleotechnic period paleotechnic phase perhaps phonograph physical picture population possible primitive production profit railroad rational régime regions Roger Bacon scientific seventeenth century sixteenth century social society standard steam engine tended textile tion utilitarian utilization values water turbine whole wood worker York