The Principles of Scientific Management
Forfatter: Frederick Winslow Taylor
År: 1919
Forlag: Harper & Brothers Publishers
Sted: New York and London
Sider: 144
UDK: 658.01 Tay
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114 THE PRINCIPLES OF SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT
are cooperating with the working men, are in pos-
session both of the science of cutting metals and of
the equally elaborate motion-study and time-study-
science connected with this work, it is not difficult
to appreciate why even the highest class mechanic
is unable to do his best work without constant daily
assistance from his teachers. And if this fact has
been made clear to the reader, one of the important
objects in writing this paper will have been realized.
It is hoped that the illustrations which have been
given make it apparent why scientific management
must inevitably in all cases produce overwhelmingly
greater results, both for the company and its
employés, than can be obtained with the manage-
ment of “initiative and incentive.” And it should
also be clear that these results have been attained,
not through a marked superiority in the mechanism
of one type of management over the mechanism
of another, but rather through the substitution of
one set of underlying principles for a totally different
set of principles, — by the substitution of one
philosophy for another philosophy in industrial
management.
To repeat then throughout all of these illustrations,
it will be seen that the useful results have hinged
mainly upon (1) the substitution of a science for the
individual judgment of the workman; (2) the scien-
tific selection and development of the workman, after
each man has been studied, taught, and trained, and
one may say experimented with, instead of allowing
the workmen to select themselves and develop in a