The Results of Machinery: Namely, Cheap Production and Increased Employment Exhibited : Being an Address to the Working-men of the United KingdomCarey & Hart, 1831 - 216 halaman |
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Halaman 7
... means of appealing to their reason and to their regard for their own interest , to endeavor to bring their minds to the same conclusions as those of the respect- able weaver , whose words we have repeated . He felt that , although he ...
... means of appealing to their reason and to their regard for their own interest , to endeavor to bring their minds to the same conclusions as those of the respect- able weaver , whose words we have repeated . He felt that , although he ...
Halaman 9
... means of books , is a vast blessing , when com- pared with slower methods of multiplying written language ; and how , by the aid of this machinery , we can produce a book for your use , without any limit in point of the number of copies ...
... means of books , is a vast blessing , when com- pared with slower methods of multiplying written language ; and how , by the aid of this machinery , we can produce a book for your use , without any limit in point of the number of copies ...
Halaman 15
... means of producing commodities , and not the end for which they are produced , ) in the place of labor thrust out by the printing - machine and the paper- machine . We cannot conclude this branch of our sub- ject without one other ...
... means of producing commodities , and not the end for which they are produced , ) in the place of labor thrust out by the printing - machine and the paper- machine . We cannot conclude this branch of our sub- ject without one other ...
Halaman 20
... mean time it would be perfectly evi- dent , from all this convulsion amongst the laborers , from all this wanton and profitless ruin , that a great deal of the land would very quickly go out of cultivation altogether , if the laws were ...
... mean time it would be perfectly evi- dent , from all this convulsion amongst the laborers , from all this wanton and profitless ruin , that a great deal of the land would very quickly go out of cultivation altogether , if the laws were ...
Halaman 21
... means of acquiring knowledge which this coun- try affords have been neglected ; for upon sound knowledge must rest the safety and hap- ! piness of all . About three or four hundred years ago , from the times of king Henry IV . to those ...
... means of acquiring knowledge which this coun- try affords have been neglected ; for upon sound knowledge must rest the safety and hap- ! piness of all . About three or four hundred years ago , from the times of king Henry IV . to those ...
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advantage agricultural amongst arch ball beam body bookbinders capital carriage centre cheap chinery cloth coal comforts consumed contrivances cost of production cotton cylinder diminished ditto duce earth effect employed employment engine England equal exertion feet fifty force four lads friction give glass greater hairbags half hand horse hour human labor hundred improvement inch increased ingenuity invention Ireland iron Joseph Foster knife labor Lancashire land less lever Liverpool London machine machinery manufacture means mechanical ment metal miles millions motion moving pendulum pendulum clock person Petworth pieces pounds pounds sterling printing printing-press produce profitable labor pulley quantity raise resistance road rollers round saving screw shillings ships side simple machines spinning steam steam-engine steel stone sumer thing thousand thread tion tons trade turn twenty United Kingdom velocity wages wedge weight wheel windlass workman wrought iron yards
Bagian yang populer
Halaman 91 - It was no uncommon thing for a weaver to walk three or four miles in a morning, and call on five or six spinners, before he could collect weft to serve him for the remainder of the day ; and when he wished to weave a piece in a shorter time than usual, a new ribbon, or gown, was necessary to quicken the exertions of the spinner.
Halaman 178 - I' the commonwealth I would by contraries Execute all things: For no kind of traffic Would I admit; no name of magistrate; Letters should not be known ; riches, poverty, And use of service, none; contract, succession, Bourn, bound of land, tilth, vineyard, none; No use of metal, corn, or wine, or oil; No occupation; all men idle, all, And women too, but innocent and pure : No sovereignty— Seb.
Halaman 115 - ... for want of a nail the shoe was lost; for want of a shoe the horse was lost; and for want of a horse the rider was lost...
Halaman 214 - We were thrown but once indeed in going, but our coach — which was the leading one — and his highness's body coach would have suffered very much, if the nimble boors of Sussex had not frequently poised it or supported it with their shoulders...
Halaman 215 - ... servants, if they had any sheet above them, it was well, for seldom had they any under their bodies to keep them from the pricking straws that ran oft through the canvas of the pallet and rased their hardened hides.
Halaman 49 - ... box, from which it was forced by means of a powerful screw depressing a tightly-fitted piston ; thence it fell between two iron rollers ; below these were placed a number of other rollers, two of which had, in addition to their rotatory motion, an end motion, ie a motion in the direction of their length ; the whole system of rollers terminated in two, which applied the ink to the types. In order to obtain a great number of impressions from * Mr.
Halaman 13 - ... been checked at once, had the great truth been generally understood, that no form or combination of machinery ever did or ever can increase, in the slightest degree, the quantity of power applied. Ignorance of this is the hinge on which most of the dreams of mechanical projectors have turned. No year passes, even now, in which many patents are not taken out for such supposed discoveries ; and the deluded individuals, after...
Halaman 161 - Two centuries ago, not one person in a thousand wore stockings ; — one century ago, not one person in five hundred wore them;— now, not one person in a thousand is without them.
Halaman 37 - Buchanan that the same quantity of human labour employed in working a pump, turning a winch, ringing a bell, and rowing a boat, are as the numbers 100, 167, 227, and 248. The most advantageous manner of applying human strength is in the act of rowing.
Halaman 13 - Hence the common error in supposing that they generate force, or have a sort of innate power for saving labour ; whereas, neither simple machines nor mechanic powers save labour, in a strict sense of the phrase. Why, then, are these machines advantageous ? Because they allow a small force to take its time to produce any requisite magnitude of effect. Thus, one man's effort, or any small power, which is always at command, by working proportionally longer, will answer the purpose of the sudden effort...