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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THE PRINCIPLES OF SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT 63
kind of work would entirely prevent them from
properly selecting themselves, that is, from removing
the seven out of eight men on the gang who were
unsuited to pig-iron handling.
As to the possibility, under the old type of manage--
ment, of inducing these pig-iron handlers (after
they had been properly selected) to work in accord-
ance with the science of doing heavy laboring, namely,
having proper scientifically determined periods of
rest in close sequence to periods of work. As has
been indicated before, the essential idea of the
ordinary types of management is that each workman
has become more skilled in his own trade than it
is possible for any one in the management to be, and
that, therefore, the details of how the work shall
best be done must be left to him. The idea, then,
of taking one man after another and training him
under a competent teacher into new working habits
until he continually and habitually works in accord-
ance with scientific laws, which have been developed
by some one else, is directly antagonistic to the old
idea that each workman can best regulate his own
way of doing the work. And besides this, the man
suited to handling pig iron is too stupid properly to
train himself. Thus it will be seen that with the
ordinary types of management the development of
scientific knowledge to replace rule of thumb, the
scientific selection of the men, and inducing the men
to work in accordance with these scientific principles
are entirely out of the question. And this because
the philosophy of the old management puts the entire