INTRODUCTION
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pamphlets and news items, commonly of a propagandist
character. To sift out the significant facts from this mass
of ex parte evidence, to distinguish the typical from the ex
ceptional, and to arrange the whole in just order and pro
portion, is a task which the combined labor of many scho
lars has not sufficed to accomplish. Least of all has the
obscurity been cleared away from that elusive mass of be
liefs, sentiments, ideals and aspirations touching economic
relationships which go to make up the social philosophy
of unionism and which account for much of its significance
to unionists themselves and to society at large.
Yet it is not enough to obtain a dispassionate view or
even to ascertain the objective facts. Fruitful understand
ing of any social movement depends not alone upon know
ledge of the features peculiar to it, but upon the ability to
relate those features to social phenomena of a more general
character, to disentangle the relevant circumstances out of
which the particular movement arose, to set forth the effi
cient causes which shaped its growth and to show what it is
becoming under the influence of forces which are currently
at work within it or which impinge upon it. For group
action is conditioned by group thought and group thought
depends in turn upon group experience, so that any useful
study of a social movement, more particularly of a class
movement, necessarily becomes a genetic inquiry into group
psychology. Such an inquiry, however, is at once confront
ed by all those obstacles which derive from the present rudi
mentary state of social science. The student of unionism,
of political parties or of business enterprise, must make
use of many generalizations which have yet to be estab
lished—among them the origin and functioning of social
classes, the rôle of class conflict in the life of communities
and the relative weight of heredity and choice, of tradition
and personal experience, and of economics and general so
cial environment in determining institutional growth and
decay. Where so little can be taken as securely given, the