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Look Inside On the Economy of Machinery and Manufactures

On the Economy of Machinery and Manufactures

£29.99

Part of Cambridge Library Collection - History of Printing, Publishing and Libraries

  • Date Published: March 2010
  • availability: Available
  • format: Paperback
  • isbn: 9781108009102

£ 29.99
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About the Authors
  • In this famous book, first published in 1832, Charles Babbage (1791–1871), the mathematician, philosopher, engineer and inventor who originated the concept of a programmable computer, surveys manufacturing practices and discusses the political, moral and economic factors affecting them. The book met with hostility from the publishing industry on account of Babbage's analysis of the manufacture and sale of books. Babbage describes the many different printing processes of the time, analyses the costs of book production and explains the publication process, before discussing the 'too large' profit margins of booksellers. Babbage succeeded in his aim 'to avoid all technical terms, and to describe in concise language', making this an eminently readable historical account. His analysis and promotion of mechanisation and efficient 'division of labour' (still known as the 'Babbage principle') continue to resonate strongly for modern industrial engineering.

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    Product details

    • Date Published: March 2010
    • format: Paperback
    • isbn: 9781108009102
    • length: 344 pages
    • dimensions: 216 x 140 x 20 mm
    • weight: 0.44kg
    • availability: Available
  • Table of Contents

    Preface
    Introduction
    1. Sources of the advantages arriving from machinery and manufactures
    2. Accumulating power
    3. Regulating power
    4. Increase and diminution of velocity
    5. Extending time of action of forces
    6. Saving time in natural operations
    7. Exerting forces too great for human power
    8. Registering operations
    9. Economy of materials employed
    10. Of the identity of the work when it is of the same kind
    11. Of copying
    12. On the method of observing manufactories
    13. On the difference between making and manufacturing
    14. On the influence of verification upon price
    15. On the influence of durability on price
    16. On price, as measured by money
    17. Of raw materials
    18. Of the division of labour
    19. On the division of mental labour
    20. On the separate cost of each process in a manufacture
    21. On the causes and consequences of large factories
    22. On the position of great factories
    23. On over-manufacturing
    24. Inquiries previous to commencing any manufactory
    25. On contriving machinery
    26. Proper circumstances for the application of machinery
    27. On the duration of machinery
    28. On combination amongst masters or workmen against each other
    29. On combinations of masters against the public
    30. On the effect of taxes
    31. On the exportation of machinery
    32. On the future prospects of manufactures, as connected with science.

  • Author

    Charles Babbage

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