Industrial Management 155 to remove obstacles to a free flow of work, the per- sonnel gets used to dealing with fact. Their con- tinuing success in securing predetermined results by using these facts brings them to a point where they base all their decisions on facts. This scientific atti- tude toward the problems of business frees them from tradition and prejudice. “Every business man who has had experience in a specific line of work arrives at certain conclusions as to what things are wise to do and what are not wise. However, some men carry these conclusions over into conditions where they do not fit the facts, and the conclusions then become prejudices. The scientific point of view is that each situation is different, and must be met by judgment and experience which are not influenced by prejudice. “Of the many benefits resulting from the scientific organization of an industrial enterprise one of the most fundamental is this scientific attitude toward the problems of business. This might seem to be an intangible advantage, but it is possibly the most prac- tical of all. With this attitude an organization is no longer held back by the man who regards as impos- sible things which have not been done before; nor by the man who believes that results accomplished in one industry cannot be expected in another merely because it is different. The scientific man knows that, if a single element in any situation is changed, the entire condition is altered and what was apparently impossible then becomes possible.” It is this scientific objective attitude of dealing with