Eliminating Waste: A Principal Agent Model with respect to Human Capital - Stefan Georg Hunger - Books - Diplom.de - 9783838690391 - October 6, 2005
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Eliminating Waste: A Principal Agent Model with respect to Human Capital

Stefan Georg Hunger

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Eliminating Waste: A Principal Agent Model with respect to Human Capital

Diplomarbeit, die am 01.09.2005 erfolgreich an einer Universit?t in ?sterreich im Fachbereich Wirtschaftswissenschaften eingereicht wurde. Abstract: Utopia, the ideally perfect state in social and moral aspects, the imaginary island represented by Thomas More in 1516 enjoying the greatest degree of perfection in politics and laws, the perfect society, have we already reached it? Several artists and authors who dealt with the subject of geographical design and functional planning of new municipal constructions have elaborated drafts and ideas about future types of society and urbanity as a Utopia of a technological and highly regulated society. This genre of literature culminated in masterpieces such as Fritz Lang's "Metropolis" (1927), Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World" (1931) and George Orwell's "Nineteen Eigthy-Four" (1949). In their visions the modern city provides a lifestyle full of comfort and convenience: push button factories, flyways that put an end to traffic jams, electronically operated high-speed trains and many other inventions that are a vital part of a goal-oriented urban management to ensure maximal efficiency. However, Fritz Lang as well as Huxley and Orwell show that all the convenience and comfort is a thigh costs. The urban habitat is depressing and in its design not aimed at recreation and personal development but at control of each individual. This culminates in the erosion of any kind of individualism. The life on the assembly line de-individualizes the inhabitants, equalizes and transforms them into machines that mechanically perform their work. Moreover, the people are no longer distinguishable, they wear the same clothes, and finally they are as the machines as which they work for... In this light, as a consequence of industrialization and the quest for maximal efficiency, the trepidation emerges whether we are running into a state of deprivation, oppression, and terror. Are we developing


100 pages

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released October 6, 2005
ISBN13 9783838690391
Publishers Diplom.de
Pages 100
Dimensions 148 × 210 × 6 mm   ·   140 g
Language English  

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