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Co-operation Concordance

Concordance status: generated from processed OCR/PDF text. Treat these as source-location aids until each passage is checked against the scan.

80 hits

Total text matches across processed Steinmetz sections.

2 sources

Sources containing at least one matched alias.

13 sections

Chapters, lectures, sections, or report divisions with matches.

Co-operation, co-operation

SourceHitsSections
America and the New Epoch7912
General Lectures on Electrical Engineering11
SectionSourceHitsWorkbenchLocation
Chapter 3: The Individualistic Era: From Competition to Co-operationAmerica and the New Epoch20Workbenchlines 874-1745
Chapter 16: The Future CorporationAmerica and the New Epoch17Workbenchlines 6975-7567
Chapter 9: America in the Individualistic EraAmerica and the New Epoch10Workbenchlines 4268-4715
Chapter 12: Evolution: Political GovernmentAmerica and the New Epoch7Workbenchlines 5328-5797
Chapter 13: Evolution: Industrial GovernmentAmerica and the New Epoch6Workbenchlines 5798-6232
Chapter 15: The American NationAmerica and the New Epoch5Workbenchlines 6598-6974
Chapter 17: ConclusionAmerica and the New Epoch5Workbenchlines 7568-8027
Chapter 5: England in the Individualistic EraAmerica and the New Epoch3Workbenchlines 2409-2775
Chapter 8: America in the PastAmerica and the New Epoch2Workbenchlines 3741-4267
Chapter 11: Democracy and MonarchyAmerica and the New Epoch2Workbenchlines 5060-5327
Chapter 2: The Epoch of the French RevolutionAmerica and the New Epoch1Workbenchlines 627-873
Chapter 6: Germany in the Individualistic EraAmerica and the New Epoch1Workbenchlines 2776-3206
Lecture 1: General ReviewGeneral Lectures on Electrical Engineering1Workbenchlines 154-565
Chapter 3: The Individualistic Era: From Competition to Co-operation - 20 hit(s)

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FROM COMPETITION TO CO-OPERATION finally a time came when the means of produc- tion of commodities increased beyond the demand possible under existing conditions. England was the first nation to benefit from the competitive organization of society. While a ...
Chapter 16: The Future Corporation - 17 hit(s)

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... be d d," to that of the modern corporation against which no justified hostility could ever have arisen even by the most exacting. The future success of our country as industrial nation depends on the extent to which co- operation can be developed within the industrial corporation, and between public and corpora- tion. This is realized more and more, and in- creasing efforts are made to bring about co- operation. Thus, in most modern corporations some w ...
Chapter 9: America in the Individualistic Era - 10 hit(s)

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... easing excess of productive capacity over the demand for the products, had made competition so vicious that it threatened with destruction the victor as well as the van- quished, in a universal v.Tcck of the industry. Thus co-operation had to come, of neces- sity, to avoid the destructive effects of com- petition. Thus co-operative agreements between for- merly competing corporations came, and the individualistic era seemed to approach its end, the co-operat ...
Chapter 12: Evolution: Political Government - 7 hit(s)

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... a man who cannot run his own house- hold, in administrative charge of the community. If, then, continuity of office, held by compe- tent men, is necessary for the efficiency which is the fundamental requirement of successful co-operation^ there must be an efl'ective respon- sibility, at le^st until such time when all men are angels, or at least sufficiently many that all offices can be filled with men who are and remain unselfish, industrious, progressive, ...
Chapter 13: Evolution: Industrial Government - 6 hit(s)

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... d standard when not capable of work- ing, are the fundamental requisites to secure interest in the maintenance of existing condi- AMERICA AND THE NEW EPOCH tions witlioiit which there can be no real pa- triotism, no real co-operation. This has nothing to do with the broader question of socialism — that is, of the elimination of capital. Socialism has as many followers in the offices of our corporations as it has in the shops, and in no way precludes ...
Chapter 15: The American Nation - 5 hit(s)

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XV THE AMERICAN NATION CO-OPERATIVE industrial organization presupposes racial unity. There can be no co-operation as long as there is racial strife and antagonism within the nation. The Ameri- can nation was formed— rather is being formed, since it is still in the formation period — by the commingling of the Anglo-Saxon, Teuton, Celt, ...
Chapter 17: Conclusion - 5 hit(s)

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... ndividual- is lie principle of industrial organization, and have organized or are organizing as rapidly as possible a co-operative system of industrial l)roduction. Against the vastly higher pro- ductive efficiency of industrial co-operation of the European nations after the war, our coun- try's individualistic industrial organization, with everybody fighting against everybody else, industrially, politically, and socially, is hope- less, and America thus will either ...
Chapter 5: England in the Individualistic Era - 3 hit(s)

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... nst their later com- petitors, and when, in the last decades, the seriousness of the situation was beginning to be realized, remedial action was difficult, because the educational institutions, not receiving the assistance and co-operation of the industries, had in their technological branches remained behind the engineering schools of America and Germany. In these latter countries, in the beginning of the industrial awakening a close co-operation and practical ...
Chapter 8: America in the Past - 2 hit(s)

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... ir existence, against the barren soil, unfriendly nature, hostile Indi- ans. Little help was to be expected from a Government which was practically non-existing; locally the loosest kind of government, essen- tially a voluntary co-operation with little man- datory power, and far away across the ocean a central government in the English king, which essentially limited itself to foreign relations, but took little part in the local issues of the community, and w ...
Chapter 11: Democracy and Monarchy - 2 hit(s)

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... ns. We will have to stop our muddling, our interference of every- body with everybody, and prepare to meet Europe by a still more efficient co-operative industrial system. How can we organize such efficiency of in- dustrial co-operation? What forms or shapes must such organization assume in our nation? It is a matter of evolution, of which we cannot foresee the end, but one thing we can see with certainty, and that is, how not to proceed; we cannot c ...
Chapter 2: The Epoch of the French Revolution - 1 hit(s)

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... -stones of the true history of the human race, which is made on the fields and farms, in the factories and workshops, in the business houses and shipping-offices. Ill THE INDIVIDUALISTIC ERA: FROM COMPETITION TO CO-OPERATION THE epoch of the French Revolution, ush- ered in by the declaration of the rights of man — liherte, egalite, fraternite — struck the fet- ters of feudalism from the human race, and gave free play to the intelligence, energy, ...
Chapter 6: Germany in the Individualistic Era - 1 hit(s)

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... a legiti- mate political party, and Bismarck, defeated and discredited, had soon to relinquish his power and retire into private life. Then began the reorganization of the Ger- man nation, the change from individualism toward co-operation, which has made the in- dustrial Germany of to-day. In the mean time a new emperor, the present Kaiser, had ascended the throne, while politi- cally and industrially the conflict was raging between the remnant of feudalism, ...
Lecture 1: General Review - 1 hit(s)

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... d for voltage. This arrangement scatters the lamps over a considerable voltage range, and different voltages are then adopted by different distribution systems, so as to utilize the entire product of manufacture at its maximum economy. The result of this co-operation between lamp manufacturers and users is, that the incandescent lamps are very much closer to requirements, and more uniform, than would be possible otherwise. The effect however is, that the distribution is rarely actually no, and in alternating current s ...