vault backup: 2026-04-29 22:09:02
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title: The Principles of Scientific Management
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tags:
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- exclude-from-word-count
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- type/media/book
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author: Frederick Winslow Taylor
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year: 1911
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---
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# The Principles of Scientific Management
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id: 2026-04-29T20:25:22-0400
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title: 2026-04-29 20:25:22
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tags: []
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daily: "[[2026-04-29]]"
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---
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# 2026-04-29 20:25:22
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## Heterodox Construction Estimating
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As a lifelong pedant, hater, contrarian, etc.
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when I first heard of [[heterodoxy]]
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as applied to highly-opinionated professional disciplines
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I thought immediately of my own highly-opinionated discipline
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in [[construction-estimating]].
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The existence of a heterodoxy requires that of an orthodoxy,
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and I believe [[holt_2023_estimating]] is typical of it.
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Construction estimating is simply finding the optimal price for a service,
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a process necessary of all service industries,
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frequently stated to be more art than science.
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Orthodox estimators may parrot the same refrain,
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but their own process is neither art nor science.
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It's much more like doing taxes:
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prolonged, tedious, opaque, over-complicated,
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and ultimately resulting in a value that no one is satisfied with,
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but that they have no basis to question.
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Also like taxes,
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orthodox estimating methods are assumed obligatory,
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but you can actually do whatever you want.
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It's a free country, man.
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---
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id: 2026-04-29T21:27:28-0400
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title: 2026-04-29 21:27:28
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tags: []
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daily: "[[2026-04-29]]"
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---
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# 2026-04-29 21:27:28
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## Soldiering
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[**Soldiering**](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_management#Soldiering)
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describes the practice of performing the bare minimum necessary to avoid punishment.
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Coined in [[taylor_1911_scientific-management]],
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though Taylor acknowledged the tendency was given many names.
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I think there must be something about the concept
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that causes terms invented for it not to stick.
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Right now it's "quiet quitting",
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although I haven't heard it used in some time.
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