Division Of Labor Quotations
Division Of Labor Quotes from:
- Ludwig Von Mises
- Karl Marx
- Adam Smith
- Christian Lous Lange
- Georg Simmel
- Aaron Sorkin
- Carroll Quigley
- Eduardo Galeano
- Emile Durkheim
- Henry David Thoreau
- Herbert Marcuse
- Immanuel Kant
- Leo Tolstoy
- Leon Trotsky
- Louis Althusser
- Marshall Mcluhan
- Napoleon Bonaparte
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Samuel Butler
- Shoshana Zuboff
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Running Quotes
What makes the existence and the evolution of society possible is precisely the fact that peaceful cooperation under the social division of labor in the long run best serves the selfish concerns of all individuals. The eminence of the market society is that its whole functioning and operation is the consummation of this principle.
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Liberty Quotes
The market economy is the social system of the division of labor under private ownership of the means of production. Everybody acts on his own behalf; but everybodys actions aim at the satisfaction of other peoples needs as well as at the satisfaction of his own. Everybody in acting serves his fellow citizens.
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Errors Quotes
The error in positivism is that it takes as its standard of truth the contingently given division of labor, that between the science and social praxis as well as that within science itself, and allows no theory that could reveal the division of labor to be itself derivative and mediated and thus strip it of its false authority.
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Challenges Quotes
If the technology cannot shoulder the entire burden of strategic change, it nevertheless can set into motion a series of dynamicsthat present an important challenge to imperative control and the industrial division of labor. The more blurred the distinction between what workers know and what managers know, the more fragile and pointless any traditional relationships of domination and subordination between them will become.
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Education Quotes
The mode of founding a college is, commonly, to get up a subscription of dollars and cents, and then, following blindly the principles of a division of labor to its extreme,--a principle which should never be followed but with circumspection,--to call in a contractor who makes this a subject of speculation,... and for these oversights successive generations have to pay.