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>
25 lines
810 B
Markdown
25 lines
810 B
Markdown
# The Workman
|
|
|
|
## Definition
|
|
|
|
The individual labourer who performs productive work, whether in manufacturing
|
|
or agriculture. In the context of the division of labour, the workman is the
|
|
operative unit whose dexterity, time, and inventiveness are the channels through
|
|
which specialisation increases output. Smith portrays the workman both as a
|
|
beneficiary of the division of labour (higher output) and as its agent
|
|
(inventing machinery through focused attention).
|
|
|
|
## Source Chapter
|
|
|
|
Book I, Chapter 1: "Of the Division of Labour"
|
|
|
|
## Context
|
|
|
|
The workman appears throughout the chapter as the primary actor: the pin-maker,
|
|
the nailer, the country weaver, the boy at the fire engine. Smith attributes
|
|
both the productive gains and many mechanical inventions to ordinary workmen.
|
|
|
|
## Economic Domain
|
|
|
|
Production
|