What is Property? An Inquiry into the Principle of Right and of Government
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About This Book
The author mounts a systematic critique of property, defining it as the proprietor's claimed right of increase and examining occupation, labor, and civil law as purported foundations. He argues that labor cannot legitimately appropriate natural wealth and advances a series of propositions contending that property is logically and socially impossible because it demands something for nothing, generates inequality, economic inefficiency, accumulation contradictions, tyranny, and social violence. The work adds a psychological analysis of justice and sociability, contrasts communism and private ownership, and outlines principles for government and a third social form intended to remedy the moral and political effects attributed to property.
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