366 EMPLOYMENT PSYCHOLOGY or even one flange of one finger, it would ruin your pos sibilities as a musician and undo the work of years spent in training.” Instead of allowing the young man to take a chance, therefore, he exerted himself to find a position in which this danger was absent. Now, in a less obvious way, every case of employment involves a determination of the applicant’s self-interest. The whole aim of selection is to select the right man for the right place, and naturally, no man is in the right place until his own interests as well as the interests of his employer are being furthered. These elements of an applicant’s point of view are fun damental and are common to all normal applicants. It does not require a psychologist to see them or to acknowl edge their truth, any more than it requires a mathema tician to see that things equal to the same thing are equal to each other, or that 2 plus 2 equals 4. However, though any man may recognize self-esteem and self-interest as fundamental factors in the human equation it by no means follows that this knowledge enables him to under stand the particular individual or to achieve the individ ual’s point of view. Just as the knowledge of the axioms is only the first step in becoming a mathematician, so the knowledge of these fundamental facts of human nature is only a beginner’s step in becoming a master of the human equation. In order to approximate the view point of the particular applicant it is essential to make a much more thorough and painstaking study of human nature. It is necessary to study human equations as systematically and scientifically as the mathematician studies the many kinds of mathematical equations. For there is an endless number and variety of human equa tions or viewpoints, as we saw when we tried to imagine ourselves in the position of an applicant and could not