S70 FREDERICK WINSLOW TAYLOR. 



The Predominant Issue. Burlington, Vt. Reprinted from the International 



Monthly, V. 2, 1901. pp. 496-509. 

 Specimens of Investment Securities for Class Room Use. The E. P. Judd Co. 



New Haven. 1901. 32 pp. 

 The Yakuts. Abridged from the Russian of Sieroshevski. Journal of the 



Anihro-pological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, V. 31, 1902. pp. 



65-110. 

 Justification of Wealth. Independent, V. 54. 1902. pp. 1036-1040. 

 Suicidal Fanaticism in Russia. Popular Science Monthly. V. 60, 1902. 



pp. 442-447. 

 The Fallacies of Socialism. Colliers Weekly. October 29, 1904. pp. 12-13. 

 .\ddress at Dinner of the Committee on TarifT Reform of the Tariff Reform 



Club in the City of New York, 1906. Series 1906, No. 4. 7 pp. 

 Sociology as a College Subject. American Journal of Sociology, V. 12, 1907. 



pp. 597-599. 

 Mores of the Present and the Future. Yale Review, V. 18, 1909. pp. 233-245. 

 Witchcraft. Fonmi. V. 41, 1909. pp. 410-423. 

 The Family and Social Change. American Journal of Sociology. V. 14, 1909. 



pp. 577-591. 

 The Status of Women in Chaldea, Egypt, India, etc., to the Time of Christ. 



Forum, V. 42, 1909. pp. 113-136. 

 Religion and the Mores. American Journal of Sociology, V. 15, 1910. pp. 



577-591. 

 War. Yale Revieiv, {new series). V. 1, 1911. pp. 1-27. 



T. N. Carver. 



FREDERICK WINSLOW TAYLOR (1856-1915) 



Fellow in Class I, Section 4, 1915. 



It is not difficult to estimate the place of Frederick W. Taylor in the 

 industries even though only a short time has elapsed since his death. He 

 is the legitimate successor of James Watt. Many engineers and manu- 

 facturers have made valuable additions to the efficiency of the steam en- 

 gine and to labor-saving machinery but the improvement of James Watt 

 opened the gateway to all the inventions of the nineteenth century. 

 Out of them ha\e sprung the development of power and the labor- 

 saving machinery as we have them toda^', and also an entirely new prob- 

 lem in the relation of great masses of labor to society. — It is exactly to 

 this problem that Mr. Taylor has turned our attention. His solution of 

 it is of precisely the same significance as James Watt's contribution to 

 the steam engine aufl Mr. Taylor's work will equally transform society. 



