Industrial government Concordance
Industrial government
Section titled “Industrial government”Concordance status: generated from processed OCR/PDF text. Treat these as source-location aids until each passage is checked against the scan.
12 hits
Total text matches across processed Steinmetz sections.
1 sources
Sources containing at least one matched alias.
3 sections
Chapters, lectures, sections, or report divisions with matches.
Matched Aliases
Section titled “Matched Aliases”Industrial government, industrial-government
Source Distribution
Section titled “Source Distribution”| Source | Hits | Sections |
|---|---|---|
| America and the New Epoch | 12 | 3 |
Section Hits
Section titled “Section Hits”| Section | Source | Hits | Workbench | Location |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chapter 13: Evolution: Industrial Government | America and the New Epoch | 7 | Workbench | lines 5798-6232 |
| Chapter 14: Evolution: Inhibitory Power | America and the New Epoch | 4 | Workbench | lines 6233-6597 |
| Chapter 17: Conclusion | America and the New Epoch | 1 | Workbench | lines 7568-8027 |
Representative Source Snippets
Section titled “Representative Source Snippets”Chapter 13: Evolution: Industrial Government - 7 hit(s)
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XIII evolution: industrial government HIE large industrial corporation is to-day by far the most efficient organization, in spite of the inefficiency forced upon it by the political Government. It is still very crude and imperfect in many respects, and especia ...Chapter 14: Evolution: Inhibitory Power - 4 hit(s)
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... re, it is probable that with the progress of the co-operative in- dustrial organization the industrial adminis- trative powers will more and more come into the foreground, the financial power become less dominating. Thus such industrial government based on the development of the corporation is not by itself entirely safe against abuse drifting in and destroying its efficiency and thereby endanger- ing its existence. Thus, there must be an inhibitory power out- side o ...Chapter 17: Conclusion - 1 hit(s)
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... ontrol and operation, the direct elective officials mainly acting in supervisory capacity, directing the policies of the commissions. Such organizations, if once created, would probably be as efficient and sat- isfactory as the industrial government devel- oped from the industrial corporation would be. However, it would require an entire change of our governmental system, the creation of a strong centralized government, like that of 225 AMERICA AND THE NEW v^'O ...