{"id":4081,"date":"1961-10-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1961-10-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/october-1961-vol-42-no-8-some-human-consequences-of-our-increasing-industrialization\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:42:55","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:42:55","slug":"october-1961-vol-42-no-8-some-human-consequences-of-our-increasing-industrialization","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/october-1961-vol-42-no-8-some-human-consequences-of-our-increasing-industrialization\/","title":{"rendered":"October 1961 &#8211; Vol. 42, No. 8 &#8211; Some Human Consequences of our Increasing Industrialization"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">It is a great error to regard economics                     and industry as arrays of statistics and masses of machines.                     They are tools for the achievement by human beings of certain                     purposes.<\/p>\n<p> Industrialization, based on science and technology, is an                     extension of man&#8217;s power over nature, emancipating him from                     many of the limitations of animal life. It enables him to                     devote more and more of his time and energy to pursuit of                     interests which mark his humanity.<\/p>\n<p>It is also a mistake to think of industrialization as having                     created man&#8217;s dependence upon his means of getting a living.                     Men have always, since the beginning of time, been utterly                     dependent for their bread upon some means of earning it. Our                     industrial society merely sets a new shape in place of the                     old, and requires us to organize ourselves in different ways.<\/p>\n<p>Industrialism is fundamentally productive technique, based                     upon the discovery and development of improved methods of                     producing goods. To use it effectively we need to learn about                     the nature of man and his material needs; the nature of man                     as a social being, and the nature of industry as it contributes                     to material and social well-being.<\/p>\n<h3>A study conference<\/h3>\n<p>To study these problems, three hundred men and women from                     Commonwealth countries have enrolled in H.R.H. the Duke of                     Edinburgh&#8217;s Second Commonwealth Study Conference. They are                     people between 25 and 45 years of age who are likely to occupy                     positions of responsibility in industrial management or labour                     organizations.<\/p>\n<p>The conference is not designed to deal with wages, hours                     of work, collective bargaining, and such things, but to focus                     upon the impact of industrialization upon people and upon                     the communities in which they live.<\/p>\n<p>While there will be a distinctly Canadian flavour to the                     conference, the overseas members will be asked to relate their                     findings in Canada to situations in their own countries. Among                     other things they will study farm mechanization and oil development,                     in both of which Canada leads other Commonwealth countries,                     and industrial ghost towns like Springhill, Nova Scotia, and                     Elliot Lake, Ontario, which have their counterparts in every                     changing society will be considered. Prince Philip suggested                     that transportation and the strangulation of traffic in large                     cities might be good topics.<\/p>\n<p>The value of the conference will not come out in recommendations,                     resolutions, criticisms, and things like that. Its value lies                     in the influence it has on the minds of the people taking                     part, so that when they get to positions of authority the                     decisions they make will be based on a reasonable understanding                     of the consequences.<\/p>\n<p>It is not a governmental affair. Its President is Prince                     Philip; its Chairman is the Rt. Hon. Vincent Massey, former                     Governor General of Canada, and the programme has been set                     up by a Council of 90 members representing industry and labour                     in Canada, with the help of groups throughout the Commonwealth.<\/p>\n<p>Students will be guests of Canadian industry and labour                     for 25 days, travelling from coast to coast. After the opening                     address in Montreal by Prince Philip, and a one-day visit                     to Ottawa, the members will fan out in study groups of fifteen,                     visiting farms, factories and communities in an inquiring                     state of mind.<\/p>\n<p>As to the nature of the discussions, Prince Philip set the                     keynote in speaking at Ottawa about the conference which centred                     on Oxford University in 1956. He said: &#8220;The important thing                     to remember is that the organizers must keep their feet firmly                     planted on the ground of practical problems and cases. The                     enterprise is doomed to failure if it is allowed to enter                     the ratified atmosphere of theory.&#8221; His hope is that the conference                     will lead its members to new and interesting thoughts about                     what things contribute to good factories, happy communities                     and satisfied individuals.<\/p>\n<h3>We cannot go back<\/h3>\n<p>What are some of the problems likely to be discussed by                     the conference members with managers, foremen and workers                     in Canadian factories, with farm operators, fishermen and                     lumbermen, with labour unions, and with community leaders?<\/p>\n<p>We cannot turn the clock back to a simpler way of life.                     Mass production has been instrumental in raising the standard                     of living of millions of people throughout the world to a                     level never before known. Without it we could not produce                     enough goods to satisfy even elementary wants. We are, at                     the middle of the twentieth century, like pilots on a transatlantic                     flight who have passed the point of no return, who do not                     have enough fuel to go back but must push on regardless of                     storms or other dangers.<\/p>\n<p>The rapid change from a society based upon agriculture to                     one based upon industry has left us off balance. In olden                     times life seemed to be a matter of seeds miraculously sprouting                     from the soil, responding to husbandry, and multiplying spontaneously.                     But Watt laboured and invented, and Arkwright, Whitney and                     Stephenson followed him, and suddenly life found itself caught                     up from a million farms and flung into a million factories.<\/p>\n<p>Customs had to be recast, relationships between man and                     man, man and woman, parent and child, master and worker &#8211;                     all had to be altered to suit the new environment. The sheen                     of the cities, with their cheap amusements and their hurry                     and bustle, overcast the attraction of the green countryside.<\/p>\n<p>It is impossible to pick on a date and say: &#8220;This is when                     it started.&#8221; Men have always been seeking easier, less burdensome,                     ways of doing the necessary chores. It was before 3000 B.C.                     that they invented the plough, the wheeled cart and the sailing                     ship.<\/p>\n<p>An upsurge in the use of machinery started somewhere around                     1660 ushering in a period we call the Industrial Revolution.                     A handful of inventions launched technology on developments                     which are still in progress. Every new device had a hundred                     children. Every one of these offspring was a problem child.<\/p>\n<p>Today&#8217;s baby is automation, and because we are so close                     to it we think of it as being more rambunctious than any of                     the others.<\/p>\n<p>A distinguished mathematician, Norbert Wiener of Massachusetts                     Institute of Technology, gives us comfort when he says that                     automation will lead to &#8220;the human use of human beings.&#8221; It                     will, he thinks, make use of man&#8217;s specifically human qualities                     &#8211; his ability to think, to analyze, to balance and synthesize,                     to decide and to act purposefully. It will relieve him of                     all the dreary work machines can do better.<\/p>\n<h3>Benefits of machines<\/h3>\n<p>There is much in industrialization with which to find fault,                     but we should stop criticizing the individual plays long enough                     to look at the scoreboard.<\/p>\n<p>In most parts of the world industrialism has meant an advance                     in material civilization, a rise in the standard of living,                     an improved status, and greater political power for humble                     people. It has bettered health, lengthened life, lessened                     laborious toil, and given us greater leisure. The working                     man of today enjoys comforts that were merely fairy tales                     to princes and barons of three hundred years ago.<\/p>\n<p>Not many generations ago famine pressed upon even the most                     advanced countries. In important western countries today poverty                     has almost disappeared. In the realm of the spirit of man                     there has been an increase in dignity resulting from the displacement                     of human muscle by inanimate sources of energy. Slavery has                     all but vanished and democracy has blossomed.<\/p>\n<p>Individual lives have expanded through the increase in goods                     available for consumption. In Canada and the United States                     practically everybody can have as much of material goods as                     is conducive to happiness, without excessive hours of labour                     and with a degree of mental culture which is needed to make                     leisure delightful.<\/p>\n<p>The Chairman of Canada&#8217;s Productivity Council, H. G. De                     Young, said this in an article he contributed to the I.A.C.                     <em>Merit News<\/em>: &#8220;Nor is the sole aim of productivity higher                     profits or higher wages or bigger dividends. Its aim is a                     greater reward for all members of the co-operating team:                     owners, employees, customers and government.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The fulness of life thus held out to people in all parts                     of the world could not exist without the complex paraphernalia                     which technology and industry provide, but there were values                     inherent in pre-industrial life which may have been unwarrantedly                     sacrificed. Gandhi argued for the retention of cottage industry                     to prevent the domination of life by the soulless rhythm of                     the machine, and industrialists today are trying by various                     means to bring some of the old fellowship back into their                     factories.<\/p>\n<h3>Machines change environments<\/h3>\n<p>Every invention becomes a part of the material environment                     to which society must adapt itself. When steam power replaced                     manual work it required the workers to adjust to a new situation                     in which the machine and not the operator set the pace.<\/p>\n<p>When we think of the rapidity of the change in the past                     two hundred years we cease to marvel that there have been                     rough places. Look at the similarity between Israel under                     the rule of King Solomon and this country at the time of the                     establishment of the first Parliament of Lower Canada in 1792:                     men in both ages wore homespun clothing, illuminated their                     houses with oil lamps, heated with wood, and travelled in                     horse-drawn vehicles. Between Solomon and our responsible                     government lay 3,000 years; between 1792 and us only 170 years.<\/p>\n<p>Advances in automation do not simply replace older techniques                     and bring us new commodities: they create new ways of life.                     They eliminate labour that was only repetitive. They increase                     the requirement for skill, and change the character of the                     skills needed.<\/p>\n<p>One widely-expressed fear is of unemployment. It is                     said that since machinery and automatic processes increase                     output per worker, the demand for goods and services will                     be met without fully employing the labour force. But over                     the long run since the start of the Industrial Revolution                     employment has been maintained by means of a general rise                     in consumption and a reduction of working hours.<\/p>\n<p>This has not happened without changes in the distribution                     of the labour force from industries producing goods for consumption                     to those making capital equipment and to others providing                     services such as transport and distribution. In Great Britain                     in 1955 there were only 465 persons engaged in production                     for every 100 in distribution, whereas seven years earlier                     there were 482.<\/p>\n<h3>What to do about it<\/h3>\n<p>Under these circumstances we need to know what are the responsibilities                     of leaders and workers.<\/p>\n<p>The human consequences of industrialization are not confined                     to workers at benches and machines. The men responsible, the                     executives, the proprietors and the financial backers, are                     affected too. They are charged with the heavy responsibility                     of managing the capital which is needed to make the machines                     effective, and with managing the businesses in the interests                     of stockholders, employees and customers.<\/p>\n<p>There are two evident reasons why executives suffer from                     tension. First, they see and must cope with the consequences                     of what they do, and second, they are so placed in the scheme                     of things that they have to be their own inspectors.<\/p>\n<p>Management is not domination over people, but organizing                     them for effective action.<\/p>\n<p>This organization contains one factor which goes to the                     root of the human consequences of this industrial society:                     people who work in our factories and stores and offices must                     be made to feel that they count.<\/p>\n<p>We are faced today with such changes in operative skills                     that skilful planning by management is required. We need training                     on the job, given by men who are not only competent workmen                     but sensitive human beings. We need revisions of school curricula,                     such as are being made here and there in Canada, to lay the                     foundation upon which rewarding training may be done.<\/p>\n<h3>Incentives<\/h3>\n<p>The old incentives of bribes and threats &#8211; the carrot or                     the stick &#8211; have lost their effectiveness. In states which                     have unemployment relief funds and free medical service the                     threat to fire has lost its punch.<\/p>\n<p>Money is not in itself the most important incentive. One                     company attached to every machine in its factory a motor that                     ticked up the wages of the worker just as a taximeter ticks                     up a fare. It was found that the workers soon lost interest                     in these meters. They found it better and more interesting                     to keep their minds on their jobs.<\/p>\n<p>Most people get satisfaction out of meeting challenges successfully.                     No increase in wages will ever make up for loss of happiness                     and contentment at work. It is a principle of good management                     that people must not have their self-esteem injured by                     any action that may lower their status in relation to that                     of others. This is something far more important than the prestige                     of having a new car or getting away first when the traffic                     light changes to green. It is personal and basic.<\/p>\n<p>Beyond all reasonable doubt, human beings need to possess                     a philosophy of life within which their work &#8220;makes sense.&#8221;                     They need a sense of purpose, enthusiasm, and a durable feeling                     of self-identity. Let the machine do the hard and boring                     work which comes naturally to it, but preserve in human beings                     the instinct for workmanship, the assurance of being needed,                     the will to achieve.<\/p>\n<h3>About building morale<\/h3>\n<p>Morale means sharing goals in common. It leads people to                     plan how to reach those goals, and stimulates the aggressive                     and efficient team action that makes goals become realities.<\/p>\n<p>This demands a much better communication of ideas than is                     yet common. The large concern is typically impersonal, and                     the loss of personal contact between worker and boss is one                     of the greatest burdens of industrial development over the                     years.<\/p>\n<p>Once management is right in its services to the public and                     in its dealings with workers, then it needs to tell about                     that rightness. Only then will workers become more concerned                     about their performance than about their prerogatives. Only                     then can management rely upon the acceptance of the responsibilities                     increasingly laid upon workers by mechanization and automation.<\/p>\n<p>It is not enough to read books, published by the score every                     year, telling about techniques of management. We need to observe                     the realities around us, relate them to human lives, and apply                     our skill to making new combinations.<\/p>\n<p>What has been accomplished so far in this century is but                     a preface to what may be accomplished in the second half if                     we can learn to make the most of human traits. Just as man                     walks only by putting one foot in front of the other, so industry                     can go forward only by putting one idea in front of another.                     Today&#8217;s new idea, to put in front of the machine idea, is                     the worth of men, men who feel themselves to be part of the                     advancing industrial age.<\/p>\n<h3>Education<\/h3>\n<p>Technological development has since its very beginning required                     that workers develop new skills and understandings.<\/p>\n<p>The newer skill is basically brain power, not muscular power                     and dexterity. Educated people are required in unprecedented                     numbers. Gadgeteering skill is not enough. Even in routine                     jobs, automation requires ability to think, a trained imagination,                     good judgment, some skill in logical methods, mathematical                     understanding, and ability well above the elementary level                     to read and write. Man can keep his ascendency only if he                     has a knowledge of principles which enables him to think originally,                     something the automatic machine cannot do.<\/p>\n<p>It is a sad spectacle to see a youth who has been trained                     as a memory machine but does not have the motivation or the                     understanding of principles to reason his way through a non-routine                     situation.<\/p>\n<p>We have passed from the old-established society where                     apprenticeship was the answer to training problems. Ours is                     an adaptive society in which techniques change daily. Education                     must lay the groundwork of knowledge which can be adapted                     to new situations &#8211; to the taking over of machines and processes                     not yet thought of or developed, to the substituting of thought                     for habit and experience.<\/p>\n<p>There are two qualities needed in today&#8217;s technologist:                     he must be able, at the least, to read delicate instruments                     with intelligence, knowing what they mean and what is at stake,                     and he must perceive the causal relationships among the elements                     in the specific sphere of activity with which he is concerned                     so as to anticipate the consequences of his actions. He must                     correlate his instrument readings with others and interpret                     a trend of events by seeing the whole picture they present.<\/p>\n<h3>Man and society<\/h3>\n<p>Let us not grow mechanical in head and in heart as well                     as in hand. The machine does not isolate man from the great                     problems of nature and society, but plunges him more deeply                     into them. In many countries, social development limps bewildered                     and protesting in the train of technical and economic practice.<\/p>\n<p>We are faced with the task of developing social skills to                     meet the changing conditions. We cannot prosper with one foot                     in the twentieth century and the other in the eighteenth.<\/p>\n<p>Social groups have as their reason for being the satisfaction                     of material and economic needs, the maintenance of spontaneous                     co-operation throughout the organization, and the fulfilment                     of men&#8217;s legitimate desires. Every member of the group must                     find in it scope for expression, peace, comfort and self-respect.                     In a society like that men and women think greatly of their                     functions and purposes. Out of it they gain a feeling of security                     and certainty and comradeship.<\/p>\n<h3>Ideas, vision, courage<\/h3>\n<p>If we are to make progress in an industrialized world, we                     must have ideas, vision and courage. These are individual                     things, not things produced by committees and boards.<\/p>\n<p>A psychologist warned in his book that we advance only by                     adjusting our behaviour to our universe as it is, by learning                     how it works and its natural laws. We may then set ourselves                     to change this world to suit our needs, or else, if we are                     not able to do that, then change ourselves to fit the new                     situation as it is.<\/p>\n<p>There is no question but that industrialism is here to stay.                     The world cannot do without the food, fuel, and all the other                     goods and services that only industrialization can supply.                     That is our world as we have it.<\/p>\n<p>The danger of the industrial machine to society is not from                     the machine itself, but from what we make of it. Samuel Butler                     warned us well in his book Erewhon when he pictured machines                     as conquering mankind by the use of men as the subordinate                     organs.<\/p>\n<p>This sort of disaster can be avoided by the co-operative                     thought and action of men and women, of intelligent working                     groups and responsibility-minded management.<\/p>\n<p>We need not look upon what appears to us to be twilight                     as the twilight of evening: we can make it the twilight of                     morning.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[41],"class_list":["post-4081","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-41"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>October 1961 - Vol. 42, No. 8 - Some Human Consequences of our Increasing Industrialization - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/october-1961-vol-42-no-8-some-human-consequences-of-our-increasing-industrialization\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"October 1961 - Vol. 42, No. 8 - Some Human Consequences of our Increasing Industrialization - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"It is a great error to regard economics and industry as arrays of statistics and masses of machines. 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They are tools for the achievement by human beings of certain purposes. Industrialization, based on science and technology, is an extension of man&#8217;s power over nature, emancipating him from many of the limitations of animal life. 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