The object of the present volume is
to point out the effects and the advantages which
arise from the use of tools and machines;—to
endeavour to classify their modes of action;—and
to trace both the causes and the consequences of applying
machinery to supersede the skill and power of the
human arm.
A view of the mechanical part of the
subject will, in the first instance, occupy our attention,
and to this the first section of the work will be
devoted. The first chapter of the section will
contain some remarks on the general sources from whence
the advantages of machinery are derived, and the succeeding
nine chapters will contain a detailed examination of
principles of a less general character. The eleventh
chapter contains numerous subdivisions, and is important
from the extensive classification it affords of the
arts in which copying is so largely employed.
The twelfth chapter, which completes the first section,
contains a few suggestions for the assistance of those
who propose visiting manufactories.
The second section, after an introductory
chapter on the difference between making and manufacturing,
will contain, in the succeeding chapters, a discussion
of many of the questions which relate to the political
economy of the subject. It was found that the
domestic arrangement, or interior economy of factories,
was so interwoven with the more general questions,
that it was deemed unadvisable to separate the two
subjects. The concluding chapter of this section,
and of the work itself, relates to the future prospects
of manufactures, as arising from the application of
science.
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