|  PORTRAITS
          OF CHARLES BEDAUX, PIONEER OF THE ENHANCED WORKING PROCESS AT
          THE TIME OF THE MARRIAGE OF THE DUKE OF WINDSOR TO MRS. SIMPSON
  TIME
            AND MOTION - IMAGE RESEARCH ALBUM
 METHOD; Penguin English Dictionary ; a systematic procedure for doing 
          something; an orderly arrangement or system; a habitual practice of 
          orderliness and regularity.
 Shorter Oxford Dictionary ; Procedure for obtaining an object; a special 
          form of procedure adopted in any branch of mental activity, whether 
          for exposition or for investigation.
 SYSTEM ;Penguin English Dictionary ; an organised set of doctrines or 
          principles usually intended to explain the arrangements or working of 
          a systematic whole.
 Shorter Oxford Dictionary ;
 1. an 
          organised or connected group of objects. A set or assemblage of things 
          connected, associated or interdependent, so as to form a complex unity. 
           2. A group 
          of bodies moving about one another in space under some particular dynamical 
          law.  3. A set 
          of organs or parts in an animal body of the same or similar structure. 
          In scientific terms, a group, set, or aggregate of things, natural or 
          artificial, forming a connected or complex whole.  Roget.'s Thesaurus; Order; uniformity, symmetry, harmony, 
          music of the spheres. Subordination, course, even tenor, routine, method, 
          disposition, arrangement, array, system, economy, discipline, ordiliness. 
          Method; way, manner, wise, gait, form, mode, fashion, tone, guise, modus 
          operandi, procedure. Path, road, route, course, trajectory, orbit, track, 
          beat.
 
 PONDER 
          THEN THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN METHOD AND SYSTEM. 
 METHOD 
          "There's method in her madness"
 "Thought his be madness, yet there is method in it." W.Shakespeare, 
          Hamlet.
 ""Rod Steiger is a Method actor"
 
 SYSTEM 
          "They were creatures of the System."
 
 1. PIONEERING 
          METHODS AND SYSTEMS. ; WORDS AND CONCEPTS.  1.1 Diderot 
          and D'Alembert, Encyclopédie, 1764; founded 
          as a French answer to Ephraim Chambers general work, the British Cyclopaedia 
          or Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences (1728). The Encyclopédie 
          is arranged alphabetically but also with some dividing up of the branches 
          of knowledge. Diderot wrote the article on Encyclopaedias that he and 
          his friends wanted a plan or design that would 
 1.2 Roget's 
          Thesaurus, "was, for Roget at least, not a literary 
          tour de force, but the culminating effort of a lifetime devoted to discovering 
          a way of presenting the unity of man's existence. .... Thus organisation 
          - and particularly classification, with all its attendant problems of 
          establishing relationships, recognising correlations, distinguishing 
          between large and small orders of things , and rendering visible the 
          spatial, chronological, numerical causal, and constituent relations 
          among all the things and happenings of existence - became early and 
          remained late Roget's primary intellectual challenge and joy and frustration." 
          D.L.Emblen, Peter Mark Roget, The Word and the Man , 
          Longman London 1970, p.259. Roget set up six major classes of ideas; 
            
          
            Abstract 
              Relations;  Space; 
              Matter;  Intellect; 
               Volition; 
               Sentient 
              and  Moral 
              Powers.  1.3 Dr.Johnson's Dictionary
 
 2. PIONEERING 
          METHODS AND SYSTEMS. ; SCIENTIFIC ANALYSIS. 
 2.1 Buffon's 
          Natural History ; that nature was Animal (15 vols for 
          quadrupeds, 9 vols on birds, 5 for fish), Vegetable (never appeared) 
          or Mineral (6 vols).  2.2 Linnaeus System of Nature, Systema Naturae , 1735, 
          categorising plants not by shape and colour, function or growing characteristic 
          but by their sexual organs (their fruit and their flower).
 2.2 Tycho Brahe and the Heavens ; an attempt to count and categorise 
          the stars.
 2.3 Taylorism ; a systematic study of all the human actions entailed 
          in physical work, used to maximise the workers on the assembly line 
          (Time and Motion) see also Chaplin, Modern Times .
 
 3. 
          SYSTEMS ON FILM   
          3.1 Chaplin, Modern Times. the assembly line
 3.2 Kenneth Anger, Scorpio Rising, dressing
 3.3 Jacques Tati, Mon Oncle, the automatic house
 3.4 Buster Keaton, The Electric House
 3.5 James Cameron, The Abyss. Submarining
 3.6 Kurosawa, The Seven Samurai, defending the village
 
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