Difference between revisions of "Anarchy 47/Towards freedom in work"
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{{tab}}What func­tion, if any, has work in the well-<wbr>being of the per­son­al­ity or, on the other hand, what re­la­tion­ship has work to life as a whole? Why is it, for ex­ample, that the cap­acity reg­u­larly to work is a dom­in­ant factor in indi­vidual norm­al­ity from the psy­chi­at­ric and the depth psy­cho­lo­gical points of view? Why too is work-<wbr>therapy an es­sen­tial treat­ment in neur­otic and psy­chotic ill­nesses where there is a with­drawal from real­ity? It is be­cause in free, mean­ing­ful work which calls for skill and de­ci­sion-<wbr>making there is at once a focus­sing of con­scious­ness on the world of real­ity and a pro­tec­tion against the back­ward group of un­con­scious fantasy and in­fant­il­ism. | {{tab}}What func­tion, if any, has work in the well-<wbr>being of the per­son­al­ity or, on the other hand, what re­la­tion­ship has work to life as a whole? Why is it, for ex­ample, that the cap­acity reg­u­larly to work is a dom­in­ant factor in indi­vidual norm­al­ity from the psy­chi­at­ric and the depth psy­cho­lo­gical points of view? Why too is work-<wbr>therapy an es­sen­tial treat­ment in neur­otic and psy­chotic ill­nesses where there is a with­drawal from real­ity? It is be­cause in free, mean­ing­ful work which calls for skill and de­ci­sion-<wbr>making there is at once a focus­sing of con­scious­ness on the world of real­ity and a pro­tec­tion against the back­ward group of un­con­scious fantasy and in­fant­il­ism. | ||
− | {{tab}}Work in which there is free ex­pres­sion of the whole man is an ego-<wbr>build­ing and sus­tain­ing func­tion of the self. The age of prim­it­ive in­no­cence, of the ''par­ti­ci­pa­tion mys­tique'' when men were yet in the mind­less state of one­ness with na­ture, was the {{w|Golden Age|Golden_Age}} spoken of in the great reli­gious tra­di­tions. In the Hindu epic, the {{l|Maha­barata|https://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/maha/index.htm}}, there is a {{w|Krita|Satya_Yuga}} or Golden Age: {{qq|In that age no buy­ing or sell­ing went on, no ef­forts were made by man; the fruits of the earth were ob­tained by their mere wish; right­eous­ness and aban­don­ment of the world pre­vailed}}. The {{w|Greek| | + | {{tab}}Work in which there is free ex­pres­sion of the whole man is an ego-<wbr>build­ing and sus­tain­ing func­tion of the self. The age of prim­it­ive in­no­cence, of the ''par­ti­ci­pa­tion mys­tique'' when men were yet in the mind­less state of one­ness with na­ture, was the {{w|Golden Age|Golden_Age}} spoken of in the great reli­gious tra­di­tions. In the Hindu epic, the {{l|Maha­barata|https://www.sacred-texts.com/hin/maha/index.htm}}, there is a {{w|Krita|Satya_Yuga}} or Golden Age: {{qq|In that age no buy­ing or sell­ing went on, no ef­forts were made by man; the fruits of the earth were ob­tained by their mere wish; right­eous­ness and aban­don­ment of the world pre­vailed}}. The {{w|Greek|Ancient_Greece}} peas­ant poet {{w|Hesiod}} be­moans the pass­ing of the Golden Age in which men cared no­thing for toil and lived like gods and had no sor­row of heart. But of his own, the {{w|Iron Age|Iron_Age}}, Hesiod cries: {{qq|Dark is their plight. Toil and sor­row by day are theirs and by night the an­guish of death}}. |
{{tab}}Writing over 2,000 years past, the {{w|Chin­ese|Han_dynasty}} philo­sopher {{w|Chuang Tzu|Zhuang_Zhou}} {{w|de­scribes|Zhuangzi_(book)}} the {{w|Golden Age of Chaos|Hundun}}, of placid tran­quil­ity in which no work was done and there was no need for know­ledge. In {{l|Genesis|https://www.sacred-texts.com/bib/poly/gen.htm}}, man lived in a {{w|para­disal|Garden_of_Eden}}<!-- 'paradisial' in original --> Golden Age until with the ex­pres­sion of self-<wbr>con­scious­ness, of know­ledge of good and evil, the curse of work was placed upon hu­man­ity. | {{tab}}Writing over 2,000 years past, the {{w|Chin­ese|Han_dynasty}} philo­sopher {{w|Chuang Tzu|Zhuang_Zhou}} {{w|de­scribes|Zhuangzi_(book)}} the {{w|Golden Age of Chaos|Hundun}}, of placid tran­quil­ity in which no work was done and there was no need for know­ledge. In {{l|Genesis|https://www.sacred-texts.com/bib/poly/gen.htm}}, man lived in a {{w|para­disal|Garden_of_Eden}}<!-- 'paradisial' in original --> Golden Age until with the ex­pres­sion of self-<wbr>con­scious­ness, of know­ledge of good and evil, the curse of work was placed upon hu­man­ity. | ||
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{{p|s4}}'''Auto­mated Work''' | {{p|s4}}'''Auto­mated Work''' | ||
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+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}{{w|Mech­an­isa­tion|Mechanization}} pre­cedes {{w|auto­ma­tion|Automation}}, and the fruits of mech­an­isa­tion and of tech­no­logy gener­ally, have been dis­trib­uted roughly on the basis of half to in­creased leisure and half to in­creased eco­nomic living stand­ards. If we move into auto­ma­tion in a sub­stan­tial way and the trend con­tinues, then, on a con­serv­at­ive estim­ate, the present work­ing week will be cut by 50% in the next thirty years. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}Mech­an­isa­tion is the use of ma­chines which, on the whole, re­place hand­work. But the pro­duct parts have to be loaded and un­loaded into and out of the ma­chine, the ma­chine itself may re­quire indi­vidual at­ten­tion, and the pro­duct part has to be moved manu­ally be­tween one ma­chine and another. With auto­ma­tion, load­ing and un­load­ing the ma­chine is mech­an­ised and trans­fer ma­chines take the pro­duct part to the next ma­chine, and so on down the line until the pro­duct parts reach as­sembly, when, again, this may be taken over by auto­mated process. The auto­mated pro­cess may be con­trolled by an {{qq|elec­tronic brain}} and, at higher levels of<!-- 'or' in original --> work, de­ci­sion-<wbr>making may be the func­tion largely of {{w|com­pu­ter­ism|Decision-making_software}}. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}I have seen re­mark­able re­sults in labour dis­place­ment in both of­fices and works through auto­ma­tion and com­pu­ter­ism, but it is from Amer­ica that a clear in­dica­tion may be had of the pre­sent and prob­able ef­fects of these pro­cesses. For ex­ample, two men can as­semble as many {{p|14}}radio sets in a day as were formerly as­sembled by two hun­dred men, and a car engine block can be pro­duced by one-<wbr>eighth of the pre­vi­ous labour force in half the time pre­vi­ously taken. It should be noted, how­ever, that only about 50% of our pro­duc­tion plants are likely to be the sub­ject of full auto­ma­tion. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}About half of the auto­ma­tion slack is taken up by shorter hours, and the other half by in­creased pro­duc­tion, ab­sorp­tion of dis­placed pro­ducers in ser­vice in­dus­tries, and by un­em­ploy­ment. The ten­dency is to in­crease the num­ber of {{qq|{{w|de­greed|Academic_degree}}}} man­agers, elec­tron­ics en­gin­eers and plan­ners,<!-- period in original --> ({{qq|From ap­pren­tice to man­aging dir­ector}} will be the sub­ject of his­tor­ical novels only, in the future), and to de­crease skill on the work­shop floor. Al­though there will be a lower­ing of skill and thought on the shop floor, it is likely that there will be an up­grad­ing of status, by giv­ing floor work­ers {{qq|staff}} stand­ing{{dash}}an event much to be de­sired. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}The re­sult of labour dis­place­ment on ser­vice in­dus­try is re­mark­able and it is likely that in a few years more than half the coun­try{{s}} labour force will be en­gaged in ser­vices{{dash}}that is, the per­cent­age ef­fort put into man­aging, plan­ning, sell­ing, fin­an­cing, and mov­ing things will radic­ally in­crease. But these ser­vices are also being auto­mated and com­put­er­ised in­creas­ingly. For ex­ample, the auto­mated super­mar­ket, the elec­tron­ic­ally con­trolled rail and motor roads, and, who knows, the com­put­er­ised med­ical and psy­chi­at­ric dia­gnosis and treat­ment, the com­put­er­ised mar­riage ar­range­ment, and the com­put­er­ised, psy­chi­at­ric merit rat­ing card in the per­son­nel de­part­ment which will pick out the rebels and out­siders who need brain sur­gery to make them happy, laugh­ing, well-<wbr>adjus­ted indi­vidu­als? And why have a doubt­ing, argu­ing, demo­cratic as­sembly com­posed of frail, party-<wbr>minded humans when a com­puter can so easily and quickly make<!-- 'made' in original --> more reas­on­able and work­able de­ci­sions? | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}Auto­ma­tion is more than a works or of­fice method; it is a de­sign for liv­ing which has to be paid for. Indeed, as {{w|Aldous Huxley|Aldous_Huxley}} re­marks in his ''{{w|Brave New World Re­vis­ited|Brave_New_World#Brave_New_World_Revisited}}'', like last year{{s}} wash­ing ma­chine, tech­no­lo­gical ad­vances are still being paid for, and each in­stall­ment<!-- as printed --> is higher than the last. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}And auto­mated fact­ory meth­ods have in­vaded the farms and farm­ing em­ploy­ment is fast de­creas­ing. The use of meat-<wbr>producing fact­or­ies with large sav­ings in labour cost and ef­fi­cient re­duc­tion of an­imal life-<wbr>hours per unit of meat pro­duced is at once a vic­tory for modern tech­no­logy and a sacri­le­gious monu­ment which bodes<!-- 'bodies' in original --> ill for our future.<!-- asterisk omitted from original --> | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | <font size="2"> | ||
+ | :::: ''Not now for them the friend­ship of the sun,'' | ||
+ | ::::: ''the bene­dic­tion of the shel­ter­ing trees,'' | ||
+ | :::: ''or soft sweet grass to rumin­ate upon in mead­owed ease'' | ||
+ | ::::: ''{{dash}}their Mother-<wbr>nature ster­iled and undone.'' | ||
+ | :::: ''Now sun­less fact­or­ies speed their orphan flesh'' | ||
+ | ::::: ''these egoid other an­imals to refresh.'' | ||
+ | :::: ''After we eat of auto­mated cattle,'' | ||
+ | ::::: ''let{{s}} light a candle in {{w|Saint Franci{{s|r}} chapel|Franciscans}}.'' | ||
+ | |||
+ | This odd aside I call {{qq|In­scrip­tion for {{popup|Whited Sep­ulchres|pretty tombs: "whited sepulchres, which indeed appear beautiful outward, but are within full of ... uncleanness (Matthew 23:27)}}.}} | ||
+ | </font><!-- this poem appeared as a footnote with an asterisk in the original --> | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | {{p|15}}{{tab}}We are cease­lessly told that the major solu­tion to our so­cial and eco­nomic prob­lems is more pro­duc­tion to keep up em­ploy­ment which will keep up buy­ing power which will keep up pro­duc­tion; and in this auto­ma­tion is to play a large part. The func­tion of pro­duc­tion, etc., is said by ortho­dox eco­nom­ists to be the satis­fac­tion of in­creas­ing natural wants{{dash}}this is the eco­nom­ics of scar­city. But, as the bril­liant {{w|Harvard|Harvard_University}} eco­nom­ist {{w|Gal­braith|John_Kenneth_Galbraith}} points out, we are no longer in an age of scar­city but in an age of af­flu­ence, and in­stead of pro­duc­tion satis­fy­ing natural wants, it is also geared to the satis­fac­tion of arti­fi­cially cre­ated wants on the pro­mo­tion of which mil­lions are spent in ad­vert­is­ing. We are caught up in a vi­cious circle from which, it seems, there is no escape{{dash}}yet there are elec­tric sleep­ing ma­chines, not yet mar­keted; so … | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}There is no doubt that tech­no­lo­gical pro­gress has far out­stripped human pro­gress towards per­sonal and so­cial matur­ity, and many are the vali­ant ef­forts to solve this threat­en­ing prob­lem. Per­haps it may be solved by large edu­ca­tional meas­ures; per­haps one of his­tory{{s}} erupt­ing minor­it­ies may opt out of the rat race and lead us in the pro­cess of chal­lenge and re­sponse; per­haps there will be a new {{w|Fran­cis­can­ism|Franciscans}}, per­haps a na­tion like {{w|India}} may opt out in {{w|Gandhian|Gandhian_economics}} terms. Per­haps small com­mun­it­ies of indi­vidu­als will form to do use­ful work by hand and with small tools on the land and in work­shops. There is as much cause for hope as for gloom, and I think that the escape from auto­mated leis­ure in and through fel­low­ship work groups is a prob­ab­il­ity. | ||
{{p|s5}}'''Work in Fel­low­ship''' | {{p|s5}}'''Work in Fel­low­ship''' | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}The broken fel­low­ship of au­thor­it­arian work life and demo­cratic so­cial life be­speaks the schiz­oid dis­ease of our cul­ture. But this is not seen as a root prob­lem of com­mun­ity life but, rather as a prob­lem of edu­ca­tion for lei­sure. We are going to be­come art­ists, handi­craft men, {{w|do-<wbr>it-<wbr>yourself|Do-it-yourself}} spe­cial­ists and what have you, so that we shall not be­come a dec­ad­ent so­ciety liv­ing under the com­pul­sion of the un­con­scious wish to re­gress to that prim­it­ive in­dol­ence, against which Freud and Jung warn us. This work in which we have to be edu­ca­ted is free work, and it is known to be a per­sonal and so­cial good. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}But why not also have the work we do ''now'' as a per­sonal and so­cial good. The way for­ward for man is the way of free work in fel­low­ship. Erich Fromm puts it thus, when writ­ing of man as a free, spon­tan­eous creature: | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}{{qq|Love is the first com­pon­ent of such spon­taneity; not love as the dis­solu­tion of the self in another per­son, not love as the pos­ses­sion of another per­son, but love as the spon­tan­eous af­firm­a­tion of others on the basis of the pre­ser­va­tion of the indi­vidual self.|l}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{tab}}{{qq|Work is the other com­pon­ent{{dash}}work as cre­ation in which one be­comes one with nature in the art of cre­ation.}} <ref>{{w|Fromm|Erich_Fromm}}: {{l|''The Fear of Free­dom''|https://pescanik.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/erich-fromm-the-fear-of-freedom-escape-from-freedom.pdf}} (Kegan Paul 1946)</ref> | ||
Revision as of 18:51, 28 March 2020
Towards
freedom
in work
In an electrical components factory we had trouble planning for smooth flow of components and balancing of operations. Output varied considerably from one operator to another. Monday’s output was some 25% lower than output on Thursday which was the closing day of the bonus week, and work discipline was only fair. After some study a group bonus system was designed and the outline, meaning and purpose of this was put to the group which was then left to discuss it among its members, (free group discussion). The girls agreed to have a trial and they were then invited to check the base times set per operation, (group participation in method). The system was introduced with the quick result that the group members so organised themselves that the flow of work was greatly improved, discipline improved as a result of internal group controls, and output increased by about 12% over that previously attained under the individual piecework system. (Here the group took over the local management function of internal work progressing and, more important, that of local man-
We use the social-
Tens of thousands of kind-
- Sweet Mary your production’s poor,
- Just dry your tears and go,
- For speed and greed are rated high,
- But love-for-others, no.
- Christ! Where’s the electrician?
- Our lamps are burning low!
- Sweet Mary your production’s poor,
The illustration given describes in simple form the group contract system in which the group shares work and the rewards of work, and has a share in decision-
Now, there is a school of apologist thought which suggests that responsible industrial democracy is at work when opposition takes place between trade unions and employers in collective bargaining [1]. This plausible theory has, it seems, considerable support at executive level within the trade unions, but it is really a kind of verbalism; for while free opposition is a characteristic of democracy, so also is dependence on individual citizen morale and the spread of individual decision-
However, this matter of our schizoid culture and of planning for everything but self-
Management: Management is a (socially necessary) activity expressed in the science and art of directing, organising and controlling material and human factors within the work institution with a view to effective and profitable results. (No-
Leadership: Leadership is a power activity in which the leader and the led identify internally with each other (a “we” feeling) and the leader uses his power in a manner which accords with the wishes and expressions of the led [4].
Management (apart from the situation when one man is both policy-
Boss-
By definition, management is boss-
A new definition of orthodox management is in order:
Management: Management is skilled power activity expressed in the direction, organisation and control of human and material factors with a view to effective, profitable results on behalf of the principals, public or private, with whom management tends to identify when carrying out the economic aims of their principals.
Management, though it has yet to be admitted in the literature, is a “Power may be defined as the capacity of an individual, or group of individuals, to modify the conduct of other individuals or groups in the manner which he (the power-
It is clear that management is a power activity, but what is not made clear in the literature is that the power is not given by those led as in leadership, but is granted to management by the economic formula which makes the power legal and is endowed by existing power holders within the business hierarchy. Thus management’s power at root is formal authority.
Authority does not depend only on the economic formula which gives it legal sanction; it depends on allegiance or formal loyalty from those over whom authority is wielded. The authority, as I have said, is legal, and to have legality is to win allegiance (but not identification) in the minds of the majority of people, given other things are equal.
Authority has small real power, but the prestige of the person holding authority is an important factor. “Even a nod from a person who is esteemed”, said Plutarch, “is of more force than a thousand arguments”. Wealth, status and technical skills are attributes which tend to increase the weight of authority, and it is on these that orthodox management must on the whole depend, if outright coercion is not to be the rule. But, to repeat, the gaining of formal allegiance through external identification with authority itself, or with this or that attribute of the person holding authority, is not leadership.
The experts, economic and psychological, who have had this point of view on leadership in work put to them have, without exception, hotly rejected it. This rejection is understandable in view of the hundreds of books and the many educational courses on management which have promoted, and still promote, the idea that orthodox management and leadership of human beings are in some mystical manner twin functions. But in our analysis of human leadership there is no rejection of management and the necessity for management; rather, there is advanced the idea that the management structure be designed to integrate the human leadership function with technological and commercial functions in a manner later to be described.
Management doctrine, as with other political and economic doctrines, serves to justify the holders of power and those of the group or class with which the power-
Some of the doctrinal assumptions are:
1. That leadership is a component of orthodox management activity. (This we have examined.)
2. That management is or can be a professional body with an ethical code independent of the code of the policy-3. That the orthodox management process and structure is the best possible and there is no reasonable alternative.
4. That the decision-
The matter of whether there is a reasonable alternative to orthodox management process and structure remains to be examined, but that decision-
It has been shown that management is a skilled power activity. Power is decision-
In his book Decision-making and Productivity, Professor Melman, as will later be shown, indicates factually how foolish is the management doctrine that the managers must manage, [7], as does Professor Likert in his New Patterns of Management [8]. But the change from centralised decision-
I like the philosopher Roger Bacon on the effect of power on man, (I will misquote slightly): “Man doeth like the ape, the higher he goeth the more he showeth his ass”. Power is of an encroaching nature, or, as the political scientist Michels put it:
“Every human power seeks to enlarge its prerogatives. He who has acquired power will almost always endeavour to consolidate and to extend it, to multiply the ramparts which defend his position, and to withdraw himself from the control of the masses”. [9]
Part of the management doctrine has to do with work, but, it should be said, the idea of work held by management is that held by the majority of people:
1. Work is effort applied for the material values which income from work will buy. (Economic theory.)
There is a corollary to this definition of work and this comprehends the notion of economic man:
1a. A whole man can wholly be bought for money and money incentives.
Many managers will rightly reject the corollary out of hand, but on the whole, judging in terms of economic techniques, the corollaryIf we compare other definitions of work with that given above we will find ourselves leaving the concealing smoke of economic work, and breathing a sweeter air:
2. Work is prayer; prayer is work. (St. Benedict).
3. I pray with the floor and the bench. (Hasidic Judaism).
4. Labour is the great reality of human life. In labour there is a truth of redemption and a truth of the constructive power of man. (Berdyaev).
5. Laying stress on the importance of work has a greater effect than any other technique of reality living. (Freud).
6. Work and love are the two chief components in the growth of mature personality in community. (Erich Fromm).
Although our stress is on the psychological value of work, as in Freud, Fromm and others, it would be pleasing if we had more room to develop a work philosophy and to quote the poets’ work visions, the fine work philosophy in the Hindu Bhagavat Gita (Gandhi’s Karma Yoga), Zen Buddhism, which somewhat parallels Benedictine work practice, Chinese <span data-html="true" class="plainlinks" title="Wikipedia: neo-
But there is small joy in work within the work institution, for work is an enforced means to earning money; and how can the soul enjoy good in its labour when there is no soul in the places where labour is organised? But these are big, if somewhat odd thoughts, which have as yet no echo in the work institution, for to equate work with fellowship, with love, with the liberated vitality of the artist of which Morris, Ruskin, Kropotkin and others speak, is to be met with the hidden smile behind the polite hand, or with a psychiatric diagnosis. Once I attacked what is now called “work study” in one of my books [10] and quoted Plato. “What”, a reviewer of the American edition asked, “has Plato to do with work?” What indeed?
Yet there is joy in work when the task is a man’s own; when he is not ant-
What function, if any, has work in the well-
Work in which there is free expression of the whole man is an ego-
Writing over 2,000 years past, the Chinese philosopher Chuang Tzu describes the Golden Age of Chaos, of placid tranquility in which no work was done and there was no need for knowledge. In Genesis, man lived in a paradisal Golden Age until with the expression of self-
Always, in the great traditions, the pain of work and the rise of self-
“Laying stress upon the importance of work has a greater effect than any other technique of reality living in the direction of binding the individual to reality. The daily work of earning a livelihood affords particular satisfaction when it has been selected by free choice; i.e. when through sublimation it enables use to be made of existing inclinations, of instinctual impulses that have retained their strength, or are more intense than usual for constitutional reasons.” (Freud, [11]).
Work which is creative and thought-
This is the unspoken fear of the many writers on the problem of leisure: that man, drugged by comfort and distracted by mass amusements, will regress to a state of neurotic dependence on the state, the managers, the amusement caterers, and the computerisers:—
- Here where brave lions roamed, the fatted sheep,
- and poppies bloom where once the golden wheat.
- Here where brave lions roamed, the fatted sheep,
Mechanisation precedes automation, and the fruits of mechanisation and of technology generally, have been distributed roughly on the basis of half to increased leisure and half to increased economic living standards. If we move into automation in a substantial way and the trend continues, then, on a conservative estimate, the present working week will be cut by 50% in the next thirty years.
Mechanisation is the use of machines which, on the whole, replace handwork. But the product parts have to be loaded and unloaded into and out of the machine, the machine itself may require individual attention, and the product part has to be moved manually between one machine and another. With automation, loading and unloading the machine is mechanised and transfer machines take the product part to the next machine, and so on down the line until the product parts reach assembly, when, again, this may be taken over by automated process. The automated process may be controlled by an “electronic brain” and, at higher levels of work, decision-
About half of the automation slack is taken up by shorter hours, and the other half by increased production, absorption of displaced producers in service industries, and by unemployment. The tendency is to increase the number of “degreed” managers, electronics engineers and planners, (“From apprentice to managing director” will be the subject of historical novels only, in the future), and to decrease skill on the workshop floor. Although there will be a lowering of skill and thought on the shop floor, it is likely that there will be an upgrading of status, by giving floor workers “staff” standing—
The result of labour displacement on service industry is remarkable and it is likely that in a few years more than half the country’s labour force will be engaged in services—
Automation is more than a works or office method; it is a design for living which has to be paid for. Indeed, as Aldous Huxley remarks in his Brave New World Revisited, like last year’s washing machine, technological advances are still being paid for, and each installment is higher than the last.
And automated factory methods have invaded the farms and farming employment is fast decreasing. The use of meat-
- Not now for them the friendship of the sun,
- the benediction of the sheltering trees,
- or soft sweet grass to ruminate upon in meadowed ease
- —
their Mother- nature steriled and undone.
- —
- Now sunless factories speed their orphan flesh
- these egoid other animals to refresh.
- After we eat of automated cattle,
- let’s light a candle in Saint Francis’ chapel.
- Not now for them the friendship of the sun,
This odd aside I call “Inscription for Whited Sepulchres.”
There is no doubt that technological progress has far outstripped human progress towards personal and social maturity, and many are the valiant efforts to solve this threatening problem. Perhaps it may be solved by large educational measures; perhaps one of history’s erupting minorities may opt out of the rat race and lead us in the process of challenge and response; perhaps there will be a new Franciscanism, perhaps a nation like India may opt out in Gandhian terms. Perhaps small communities of individuals will form to do useful work by hand and with small tools on the land and in workshops. There is as much cause for hope as for gloom, and I think that the escape from automated leisure in and through fellowship work groups is a probability.
The broken fellowship of authoritarian work life and democratic social life bespeaks the schizoid disease of our culture. But this is not seen as a root problem of community life but, rather as a problem of education for leisure. We are going to become artists, handicraft men, <span data-html="true" class="plainlinks" title="Wikipedia: do-
But why not also have the work we do now as a personal and social good. The way forward for man is the way of free work in fellowship. Erich Fromm puts it thus, when writing of man as a free, spontaneous creature:
“Love is the first component of such spontaneity; not love as the dissolution of the self in another person, not love as the possession of another person, but love as the spontaneous affirmation of others on the basis of the preservation of the individual self.
“Work is the other component—
- ↑ Clegg: A New Approach to Industrial Democracy (Blackwell 1960)
- ↑ Gillespie: Free Expression in Industry (Pilot Press 1948)
- ↑ Falk: The Business of Management (Penguin 1962)
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Lasswell & Kaplan: Power and Society (Routledge 1952)
- ↑ Russell: Power (W. W. Norton 1938)
- ↑ Tawney: Equality (Harcourt Brace 1931)
- ↑ Melman: Decision-Making and Productivity (Blackwell 1958)
- ↑ Likert: New Patterns of Management (McGraw-Hill 1961)
- ↑ Michels: Political Parties (Hearsts 1915)
- ↑ Gillespie: Dynamic Motion and Time Study (Paul Elek 1948)
- ↑ Freud: Civilization and its Discontents (Hogarth Press 1946)
- ↑ Jung: Psychology of the Unconscious (Kegan Paul 1944)
- ↑ Walker and Guest: The Man on the Assembly Line (Harvard 1952)
- ↑ Fromm: The Fear of Freedom (Kegan Paul 1946)