Daniel Katz (1903–1998) American psychologist
Source: The Social Psychology of Organizations (1966), p. 562
Source: New patterns of management, (1961), p. 342
Daniel Katz (1903–1998) American psychologist
Source: The Social Psychology of Organizations (1966), p. 562
Randal Marlin (1938) Canadian academic
Source: Propaganda & The Ethics Of Persuasion (2002), Chapter Four, Ethics And Propaganda, p. 155
“Thiago Silva is the best centre back in the world by a long way.”
Thiago Silva (1984) Brazilian footballer
Rio Ferdinand, 2014 https://twitter.com/rioferdy5/status/423397345905356800 <br class="br">From former and current footballers
Walter James, 4th Baron Northbourne (1896–1982) British rower, agriculturalist and translater
Intellectual Freedom (1971)
Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777–1855) German mathematician and physical scientist
As quoted by Louise Grinstein, Sally I. Lipsey, Encyclopedia of Mathematics Education (2001) p. 235.
Giordano Bruno (1548–1600) Italian philosopher, mathematician and astronomer
On the Infinite Universe and Worlds (1584)
Peter Kropotkin (1842–1921) Russian zoologist, evolutionary theorist, philosopher, scientist, revolutionary, economist, activist, geogr…
Anarchism: Its Philosophy and Ideal (1896)
Context: What economists call over-production is but a production that is above the purchasing power of the worker, who is reduced to poverty by Capital and State. Now, this sort of over-production remains fatally characteristic of the present capitalist production, because — Proudhon has already shown it — workers cannot buy with their salaries what they have produced and at the same time copiously nourish the swarm of idlers who live upon their work.
The very essence of the present economic system is, that the worker can never enjoy the well-being he has produced, and that the number of those who live at his expense will always augment. The more a country is advanced in industry, the more this number grows. Inevitably, industry is directed, and will have to be directed, not towards what is needed to satisfy the needs of all, but towards that which, at a given moment, brings in the greatest temporary profit to a few. Of necessity, the abundance of some will be based on the poverty of others, and the straitened circumstances of the greater number will have to be maintained at all costs, that there may be hands to sell themselves for a part only of that which they are capable of producing; without which, private accumulation of capital is impossible!
These characteristics of our economical system are its very essence. Without them, it cannot exist; for, who would sell his labor power for less than it is capable of bringing in, if he were not forced thereto by the threat of hunger?
And those essential traits of the system are also its most crushing condemnation.
Gregory Balestrero (1947) American industrial engineer
NACE International (1990). Materials Performance. p. 104.
1990s
Peter Dicken (1938) British geographer
Source: Global Shift (2003) (Fourth Edition), Chapter 15, Winners and Losers, p. 509