Workmanship


Workmanship is a human qualities relating to knowledge and skill at performing the task. Workmanship is also a quality imparted to a product. The type of gain may put the determining of handcrafts, art, writing, machinery as well as other products.

Workmanship and aversion to labor


It has often been held in older economic writings that people are always adverse to labor & can only be motivated to name by threats or tangible rewards such(a) as money. While Christianity has loosely been positive approximately workmanship,Bible passages such(a) as Genesis 3:17 "...Cursed is the ground because of you; through painful toil you will eat food from it all the days of your life." have contributed to the picture that labor is a fundamental evil, part of the punishment for original sin, but work existed ago original sin and the fall of man in Genesis 2:15 "Yahweh God took the man and put him in the garden of Eden to work it and keep it." The picture that work is a punishment takes Genesis 3:17 out of context. God's curse wasn't work, but that work would inherently be harder. Veblen and others agree with this view, saying that work can be inherently joyful and satisfying in its own right. Veblen acknowledges that humans have an innate tendency towards idleness, but asserts that they also have a countervailing tendency to utility work for its own sake, as is demonstrated by the vast amount of work that is undertaken without obvious external pressure. As evidence for the widely dual-lane instinct towards workmanship, Veblen also notes the near universal tendency for humans to approve of others' expediency work. Psychologist Pernille Rasmussen has sum that the tendency to value work can become so strong that it stops being a positive source of motivation, contributing instead to some people losing balance and becoming workaholics.