A Phenomenum Mentioned Even Common to See TODAY
I'm now engaged in Chapter Four. Alfred says hands-on experience in person teaches a fellow much more than if he/she gets a master in the field as his/her teacher. And in his times the top manufacturers who owned assembly lines factories workshops etc. let their sons experience all the successions of the production. Such 'education' would guarantee a sound take-over after they retired and their sons inherited the company.
When I talk about this phenomenom with my father he thinks highly of it. By the way he was an economics mayjor too when he was in my age. Even in contemporary China all entrepreneurs train their sons in such a way. What Alfred wrote in his book a century ago turns out to be still so true.
And again I compain a lot about the missing graphs tables statistics mathematic functions in this book. As I look into a textbook of economics I always expect data which demonstrate phenomena in an ive way. But my daddy insists that graphs in economics are just extravagant showing-off prestented by ostentatious economists.
There are quite a lot printing errors such as '?00 pounds' 'it spredecessors(which he meant its predecessors as a matter of fact)'. Don't be confused. It's just the computer programmer who is to blame.
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