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Forces of production: a social history of industrial automation (1st ed.)

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Focusing on the design and implementation of an important new production technologycomputer-based automatic machine toolsDavid F.

Noble challenges the idea that technology has a life of its own which proceeds along a singular path.

Such as seen, technology has been both a convenient scapegoat and a universal panacea, serving to disarm critics, divert attention, depoliticize debate, and dismiss discussion of the fundamental antagonisms and inequalities that continue to beset America.

This provocative study of the postwar automation of the American metal-working industrythe heart of a modern industrial economyexplains how dominant institutions like the great corporations, the universities, and the military, along with the ideology of modern engineering, actually shape the development of technology itself.Noble shows how the system of ';numerical control,' perfected at MIT and put into general industrial use, was chosen over competing systems for reasons other than the technical and economic superiority typically advanced by its promoters.

Numerical control took shape at an MIT laboratory rather than in a manufacturing setting, and a market for the new technology was created, not by cost-minded professors, but instead by the U.S.

Air Force. Meanwhile, completing methods, equally promising, were rejected because, among other reasons, they left control of production in the hands of the skilled workers, rather than in those of management or programmers.

Thus, Noble demonstrates, engineering design in influenced by political, economic managerial, and sociological considerations, while the deployment of equipmentillustrated by a detailed case history of a large General Electric plant in Massachusettscan become entangled with such matters as labor classification, shop organization, managerial responsibility, and patterns of authority.In its examination of technology as a human, social process, Forces of Production is a pathbreaking contribution to the understanding of this phenomenon in American society.

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£55.00
Product Details
Knopf
0307828506 / 9780307828507
eBook (EPUB)
303.483
23/01/2013
English
409 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
Derived record based on unviewed print version record.