Factory (from factor), is a name which appears originally to have been given to establishments of merchants and factors (agents) resident in foreign countries; it now signifies a place in which the various processes of a particular manufacture are carried on simultaneously. The rapid growth of factories in this sense is a comparatively recent development of industry, resulting from the free use of machinery and the consequent subdivision of labour sine the late 18th century. Amongst the advantages of the factory system are generally counted: increased productivity arising from the minute division of labour; the mechanical accuracy, and the cheapness of the product turned out by machinery (mass production); the facilities for union and co-operation for common improvement afforded by bringing large masses of workmen together. But this last consideration is probably more than counterbalanced by the smaller amount of independent intelligence called forth in the individual worker, through the monotony of the minutely subdivided operations. Since the 19th century the disadvantages of the factory system have been recognised, and were originally cited as the unhealthiness of the crowded rooms, and the increasing demand on the labour of women and children, which was perceived as interfering with the economy of domestic life. This last issue was sought to be redressed by factory acts, first passed in the late 18th century. Research Factory