The Instinct of Workmanship and the State of the Industrial
Arts, originally issued in 1914, is described by Murray Murphey as
his "most important work." In this volume that the theoretical
foundations are put forth on full display. Veblen's juxtaposition
of the instinctive values of community welfare in contrast to the
pecuniary values of commercial exchange was the basis of his later,
more famous works. The book makes plain Veblen's basic dichotomy
between technological institutions for making goods and the
pecuniary institutions for making money.
Veblen's book is taken up with the casual processes in the
history of culture centered on human instincts and habits. For him,
a change in the natural or social conditions produces effects only
by changing the behavior of people. The whole panoply of habits,
instincts, and motives, points to a theory of social and cultural
change which substantially differs from the pragmatic tradition
that swept America in the early decades of this century. Veblen
makes so many unique contributions and insights that his work
outlives the limitations of its theoretical shell.
As is the case for most Veblen's works, footnotes and references
are sparse, no index is provided, and the reader is left to fill in
the missing paraphernalia the way one does with a novel. Indeed,
the reader is swept along Veblen's captivating rhetoric in seven
brilliant chapters moving from the instincts in primitive
technology, to the current state of industrial arts, to the
examination of predatory culture invited to the civilizational
table by the competitive system, and finally into a contrast of
handicrafts and machine industry.
Veblen offers a dramaturgy and a morality of the industrial
order of his time: much has changed, but a great deal remains the
same and is easily identifiable by the discerning reader. In this
passage through text and time, Murphey is the perfect guide,
displaying a keen knowledge of philosophy, psychology, and the
American context in which Veblen worked. Here we have a companion
essay worthy of The Instinct of Workmanship and its author.
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