Seventy-Five Years Of Progress In Ore Dressing

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 44
- File Size:
- 1794 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1947
Abstract
PROGRESS in a technical art is of several kinds. It springs .from many diverse sources. It comprises invention, mechanical improvement, operating advance, analytical study, education. Invention is, by definition, a relatively great, essentially individual step, taken quickly. Operating advance is the slow, cumulated march of practice; in contrast, it moves at the pace of the tortoise, but over, the years its effects rival and, in some cases, surpass those of invention. Mechanical improvement- is a usual concomitant of the reduction of invention. to operating practice; thereafter it is a primary tool of operating advance. Analytical study is the process of mental digestion of the fruits of invention and practice. Its purpose is to render these into a form assimilable by the art as a whole, and by the perennial crop of would be practitioners. Education, disseminating the results of such study, consolidates and maintains the positions gained. Thus, slowly at first, but continuously accelerating, the tide of progress grows- to flood. Such growth, in mathematical parlance, is expressible in the general form y = mxn, where x is time, n is some positive number greater than one, m is another positive number, and y is the state of the action at instant x. When n is 2, the readers will recognize the graph of the equation as one branch of the familiar square parabola, whose property it is to become parallel to the y-axis; i.e., to move at an infinite rate, in that never-never
Citation
APA:
(1947) Seventy-Five Years Of Progress In Ore DressingMLA: Seventy-Five Years Of Progress In Ore Dressing. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1947.