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the foundations of personality-第58章

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 in our treatment of this subject if we omitted two hugely important factors in work character。 Two powerful motives operate;the necessity of working and work as an escape from ourselves。 Not much need be said of the pressure of necessity。 〃To eat one must work。〃 This sentence condenses the threat behind most of the workers of the world。 They cannot stop if they wouldfor few are those; even in prosperous communities; who have three months of idleness in their savings。 The feeling of insecurity this fact brings makes a nightmare out of the lives of the many; for to the poor worker the charity organization is part of the penalty to be paid for sickness or unemployment。 To my mind there are few things more pathetic than a good man out of a job; and few things for which our present society can be so heartily damned。 Few even of the middle class can rest; their way of living leaves them little reserve; and so they plug along; with necessity as the spur to their industry。 To escape ourselves! Put any person of adult age; or younger; in a room with nothing to do but think; and you reduce him to abject misery and restlessness。 Most of our reading; entertainment; has this object; and if necessity did not spur men on to work steadily; the tedium of their own thoughts would。 To reflect is pleasant only to a few; and the need of a task is the need of the average human being。 Perhaps once upon a time in some idyllic age; some fabled age of innocence; time passed pleasantly without work。 To…day; work is the prime way of killing time; adding therefore to its functions of organizing activity; achievement and social value of recreation。 Yet contradictory as it seems; though many of us love work for its own sake; most of us do not love our own work。 That is because few of us choose our work; it is thrust upon us。 Happy is he who has chosen and chosen wisely! Industry; energy; steadiness are parts of the work…equipment; enthusiasm; eagerness; the love of work; in short; is another part。 Love of work is not a unitary character; it is a resultant of many forces and motives。 Springing from the love of activity; it receives its direction from ambition and is reinforced by success and achievement。 Few can continue to love a work at which they fail; for self…love is injured and that paralyzes the activity。 Here and there is some one who can love his work; even though he is half…starved as a result;a poet; a novelist; an inventor; a scientist; but these dream and hope for better things。 But the bulk of the half…starved labor of the world; half…starved literally as well as symbolically; has no light of hope ahead of it and cannot love the work that does not offer a reward。 It is easy for those who reap pleasure and reward from their labors to sing of the joy of work; business man; professional man; artist; handicraftsman; farmer;these may find in the thing they do the satisfaction of the creative desires and the reward of seeing their product; but the factory is a Frankenstein delivering huge masses of products but eating up the producers。 The more specialized it becomes the less each man creates of the unit; machine or ornament; the less he feels of achievement。 Go into a cotton mill and watch the machines and their less than human attendants at their over…specialized tasks。 Then ask how such workers can take any joy in work? Let us say they are paid barely enough to live upon。 What food does the desire for achievement receive? What feeds the love of the concrete finished product of which a man can proudly say; 〃I did it!〃 The restlessness of this thwarted desire is back of much of that social restlessness that puzzles; annoys and angers the better…to…do of the world。 As the factory system develops; as 〃efficiency〃 removes more and more of the interest in the task; social unrest will correspondingly increase。 One of the great problems of society is this: How are we to maintain or increase production and still maintain the love of work? To solve this problem will take more than the efficiency expert who works in the interest of production alone; it will take the type of expert who seeks to increase human happiness。 Native industry; the love of work are variables of importance。 No matter what social condition we evolve; there will be some who will be 〃slackers;〃 who will regard work as secondary to pleasure; who will take no joy or pride in the finished product; who will feel no loyalty to their organization; and vice versa; there will be those working under the most adverse conditions who will identify themselves; their wishes and purposes with 〃the job〃 and the product。 Nowhere are the qualities of persistent effort and interest of such importance as in industry; and nowhere so well rewarded。 In the habits of efficiency we have a group of mechanically performed actions and stereotyped reactions essential for work。 Except in certain high kinds of work; which depend upon originality and initiative; method; neatness and exactness are essential。 〃Time is money〃 in most of the business of the world; in fact time is the great value; since in it life operates。 The unmethodical and untidy waste time as well as offend the esthetic tastes; as well as directly lose material and information。 The habits in this sense are the tools of industry; though exactness may be defined as more than a tool; since it is also part of the final result。 He whose work…conscience permits him to be inexact; permits himself to do less than his best and in that respect cheats and steals。 The work…conscience is as variably developed as any other type of conscience。 There are those who are rogues in all else but not in their work。 They will not turn out a bad piece of work for they have identified the best in them with their work。 Contrariwise; there are others who are punctilious in all other phases of morality who are slackers of an easy standard in their work efforts。 This is as truly a double standard of morals as anything in the sex sphere;and as disastrous。 There is on every second wall in America the motto typical of our country; 〃Do it now!〃 To it could be added a much better one; 〃Do it well!〃 The energy of work and its promptness are only valuable when controlled by an ideal of service and thoroughness。 A great part of the morals of the world is neglected; part of the responsibility is not felt; in that a code of work is yet to be enunciated in an authoritative way。 I would have it shown graphically that all inefficiency is a social damage with a boomerang effect on the inefficient and careless; and in the earliest school; teaching the need of thoroughness would be emphasized。 Our schools are tending in the other direction; the curriculum has become so extensive that superficiality is encouraged; the thorough are penalized; and 〃to get away with it〃 is the motto of most children as a result。 In an ideal community every man and woman will be evaluated as to intelligence and skill; and a place found accordingly。 Since we live a few centuries too soon to see that community; since jobs are given out on a sort of catch…as…catch…can plan; it would be merely a counsel of perfection to urge some such method。 Nevertheless ambitious parents; whose means or whose self…sacrifice enable them to plan careers for their children; should take into solemn account; not their own ambitions; but the ability of the child。 A man is apt to see in his son his second self and to plan for him as for a self that was somehow to succeed where he failed。 But every tub in the ocean of human life must navigate on its own bottom; and a father's wishes will not make a poet into a banker or a fool into a philosopher。 Nothing is so disastrous to character as to be misplaced in work; and there is as much social inefficiency in the high…grade man in the low…grade place as when the low…grade man occupies a high…grade place。 We have no means of discovering originality; imagination or special ability in our present…day psychological tests; and we cannot measure intensity of purpose; courage and the quality of interest。 Yet watching a child through its childhood and its adolescence ought to tell us whether it is brilliant or stupid; whether it is hand…minded or word…minded; whether it is brave; loyal; honest; a leader or a foll
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