Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- INTRODUCTION: STATEMENT OF THE OBJECT AND PLAN OF THE WORK
- CHAPTER I SOURCES OF THE ADVANTAGES ARISING FROM MACHINERY AND MANUFACTURES
- CHAPTER II ACCUMULATING POWER
- CHAPTER III REGULATING POWER
- CHAPTER IV INCREASE AND DIMINUTION OF VELOCITY
- CHAPTER V EXTENDING TIME OF ACTION OF FORCES
- CHAPTER VI SAVING TIME IN NATURAL OPERATIONS
- CHAPTER VII EXERTING FORCES TOO GREAT FOR HUMAN POWER, AND EXECUTING OPERATIONS TOO DELICATE FOR HUMAN TOUCH
- CHAPTER VIII REGISTERING OPERATIONS
- CHAPTER IX ECONOMY OF MATERIALS EMPLOYED
- CHAPTER X OF THE IDENTITY OF THE WORK WHEN IT IS OF THE SAME KIND, AND OF ITS ACCURACY WHEN OF DIFFERENT KINDS
- CHAPTER XI OF COPYING
- CHAPTER XII ON THE METHOD OF OBSERVING MANUFACTORIES
- CHAPTER XIII ON THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MAKING AND MANUFACTURING
- CHAPTER XIV ON THE INFLUENCE OF VERIFICATION ON PRICE
- CHAPTER XV ON THE INFLUENCE OF DURABILITY ON PRICE
- CHAPTER XVI ON PRICE, AS MEASURED BY MONEY
- CHAPTER XVII OF RAW MATERIALS
- CHAPTER XVIII OF THE DIVISION OF LABOUR
- CHAPTER XIX ON THE DIVISION OF MENTAL LABOUR
- CHAPTER XX ON THE SEPARATE COST OF EACH PROCESS IN A MANUFACTURE
- CHAPTER XXI ON THE CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF LARGE FACTORIES
- CHAPTER XXII ON THE POSITION OF GREAT FACTORIES
- CHAPTER XXIII ON OVER-MANUFACTURING
- CHAPTER XXIV INQUIRIES PREVIOUS TO COMMENCING ANY MANUFACTORY
- CHAPTER XXV ON CONTRIVING MACHINERY
- CHAPTER XXVI PROPER CIRCUMSTANCES FOR THE APPLICATION OF MACHINERY
- CHAPTER XXVII ON THE DURATION OF MACHINERY
- CHAPTER XXVIII ON COMBINATION AMONGST MASTERS OR WORKMEN AGAINST EACH OTHER
- CHAPTER XXIX ON COMBINATIONS OF MASTERS AGAINST THE PUBLIC
- CHAPTER XXX ON THE EFFECT OF TAXES AND OF LOCAL RESTRICTIONS UPON MANUFACTURES
- CHAPTER XXXI ON THE EXPORTATION OF MACHINERY
- CHAPTER XXXII ON THE FUTURE PROSPECTS OF MANUFACTURES, AS CONNECTED WITH SCIENCE
CHAPTER XVII - OF RAW MATERIALS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- INTRODUCTION: STATEMENT OF THE OBJECT AND PLAN OF THE WORK
- CHAPTER I SOURCES OF THE ADVANTAGES ARISING FROM MACHINERY AND MANUFACTURES
- CHAPTER II ACCUMULATING POWER
- CHAPTER III REGULATING POWER
- CHAPTER IV INCREASE AND DIMINUTION OF VELOCITY
- CHAPTER V EXTENDING TIME OF ACTION OF FORCES
- CHAPTER VI SAVING TIME IN NATURAL OPERATIONS
- CHAPTER VII EXERTING FORCES TOO GREAT FOR HUMAN POWER, AND EXECUTING OPERATIONS TOO DELICATE FOR HUMAN TOUCH
- CHAPTER VIII REGISTERING OPERATIONS
- CHAPTER IX ECONOMY OF MATERIALS EMPLOYED
- CHAPTER X OF THE IDENTITY OF THE WORK WHEN IT IS OF THE SAME KIND, AND OF ITS ACCURACY WHEN OF DIFFERENT KINDS
- CHAPTER XI OF COPYING
- CHAPTER XII ON THE METHOD OF OBSERVING MANUFACTORIES
- CHAPTER XIII ON THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MAKING AND MANUFACTURING
- CHAPTER XIV ON THE INFLUENCE OF VERIFICATION ON PRICE
- CHAPTER XV ON THE INFLUENCE OF DURABILITY ON PRICE
- CHAPTER XVI ON PRICE, AS MEASURED BY MONEY
- CHAPTER XVII OF RAW MATERIALS
- CHAPTER XVIII OF THE DIVISION OF LABOUR
- CHAPTER XIX ON THE DIVISION OF MENTAL LABOUR
- CHAPTER XX ON THE SEPARATE COST OF EACH PROCESS IN A MANUFACTURE
- CHAPTER XXI ON THE CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF LARGE FACTORIES
- CHAPTER XXII ON THE POSITION OF GREAT FACTORIES
- CHAPTER XXIII ON OVER-MANUFACTURING
- CHAPTER XXIV INQUIRIES PREVIOUS TO COMMENCING ANY MANUFACTORY
- CHAPTER XXV ON CONTRIVING MACHINERY
- CHAPTER XXVI PROPER CIRCUMSTANCES FOR THE APPLICATION OF MACHINERY
- CHAPTER XXVII ON THE DURATION OF MACHINERY
- CHAPTER XXVIII ON COMBINATION AMONGST MASTERS OR WORKMEN AGAINST EACH OTHER
- CHAPTER XXIX ON COMBINATIONS OF MASTERS AGAINST THE PUBLIC
- CHAPTER XXX ON THE EFFECT OF TAXES AND OF LOCAL RESTRICTIONS UPON MANUFACTURES
- CHAPTER XXXI ON THE EXPORTATION OF MACHINERY
- CHAPTER XXXII ON THE FUTURE PROSPECTS OF MANUFACTURES, AS CONNECTED WITH SCIENCE
Summary
(153.) Although the cost of any article may be reduced in its ultimate analysis to the quantity of labour by which it was produced; yet it is usual, in a certain state of the manufacture of most substances, to call them by the term raw material. Thus iron, when reduced from the ore and rendered malleable, is in a state of preparation for a multitude of useful purposes, and is the raw material out of which most of our tools are made. In this stage of its manufacture, but a moderate quantity of labour has been expended on the substance; and it becomes an interesting subject to trace the various proportions in which raw material, in this sense of the term, and labour unite to constitute the value of many of the productions of the arts.
(154.) Gold-leaf consists of a portion of the metal beaten out to so great a degree of thinness, as to allow a greenish-blue light to be transmitted through its pores. About 400 square inches of this are sold, in the form of a small book containing 25 leaves of gold, for 1s. 6d. In this case, the raw material, or gold, is worth rather less than two-thirds of the manufactured article. In the case of silver-leaf, the labour considerably exceeds the value of the material. A book of fifty leaves, covering above 1,000 square inches, is sold for 1s. 3d.
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- On the Economy of Machinery and Manufactures , pp. 125 - 130Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1832