Restructure entity storage from per-chapter subdirectories to a flat
canonical set in output/entities/. Each entity exists as a single file;
duplicates across chapters are detected by slug collision and skipped
(first occurrence wins). Chapter views use {{ include }} transclusion
to reference shared entity files.
Add @{existing_entities} macro to extract-entities template so the LLM
knows which entities already exist and focuses on genuinely new ones.
Refactor _call_llm() from _execute_llm() for callers that handle their
own file I/O. 41 unique entities from 4 chapters (2 duplicates removed).
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
1.6 KiB
Country Workman
Definition
A rural artisan or tradesman who, due to the limited extent of the local market, must perform a wide variety of tasks rather than specialising in a single operation. The country workman is the antithesis of the specialised urban worker: a country carpenter must also serve as joiner, cabinet-maker, carver, wheel-wright, plough-wright, and waggon-maker, while a country smith handles every sort of work in iron. This multi-functional role is an economic consequence of insufficient market demand to support narrow specialisation.
Source Chapter
Book 1, Chapter 3: "That the Division of Labour is Limited by the Extent of the Market"
Context
Smith uses the country workman to illustrate how small markets force generalism. The contrast between the country carpenter (who does everything in wood) and the urban specialist (who does only one thing) is direct evidence for the chapter's thesis that the division of labour depends on market extent.
Economic Domain
Production
Smith's Original Wording
"A country carpenter deals in every sort of work that is made of wood; a country smith in every sort of work that is made of iron. The former is not only a carpenter, but a joiner, a cabinet-maker, and even a carver in wood, as well as a wheel-wright, a plough-wright, a cart and waggon-maker."
Modern Interpretation
This illustrates the modern concept of economies of specialisation versus generalisation. In development economics, the persistence of multi-occupation households in rural areas reflects the same constraint Smith identified: insufficient local demand to support full-time specialisation.