For example can you own something once you are dead? In this sense owning something does not attach you to the thing in an compelling way. — Andrew4Handel
You may disagree with the law all you like. But there is nothing else which will define property and establish rules governing it, which may be enforced by any authority. — Ciceronianus the White
For the concept of "property" to exist, the only thing required is law, if by "property" you mean something which a person can claim to own.
It seems property can only be maintained by force where a society and its military and police and government defend an individuals property claim. But beyond that I don't see any metaphysical type of ownership justified by someones innate right to an object.
I think one problem is how the first society or individual managed to gain the first property or land before it was distributed via a legal system. Personally, I don't believe I own anything and I am happy for anyone to share my property if they need it and I consider myself as a steward borrowing and caring for resources that may be inherited by someone else. — Andrew4Handel
It’s the other way about. Without property there would be no laws protecting it. — NOS4A2
I don't think the law justifies property. — Andrew4Handel
If "property" as being used in this thread means "a physical object" or "land" than I suppose that's the case. But I thought something different was being addressed. — Ciceronianus the White
This is very similar to but subtly distinct from the matter of property rights — of not acting upon something contrary to the will of its owner (including a person's body, which they necessarily own, i.e. necessarily have rights over), which lies in the traditional intersection of perfect duties and procedural justice — because it does not rely on any assignment of ownership, but only on experiential introspection; in much the same way that synthetic a priori knowledge is very similar to but subtly different from analytic a priori knowledge, in that it does not rely on any assignment of meaning to words, but only, again, on experiential introspection. — Pfhorrest
Slavery has been prolific throughout history. The are dictatorships and theocracies with few if any individuals rights and many women and girls are controlled by male relatives. Children have limited autonomy from parents. Suicide has been illegal in many places throughout time and so on.
So self ownership does not seem to be the default. — Andrew4Handel
it was the basis for Locke's theory of property. He also talked about one's own labours. However one's own labour requires exploitation of the environment and resources and you can question what justifies that.
I think the problem I have with the property is the reification of property as something someone has some kind of metaphysical justified innate claim over rather than a tool for resource distribution. — Andrew4Handel
When I say that people necessarily own themselves, i.e. necessarily have rights over themselves, I don't mean that those rights are necessarily recognized by all civilizations. To have a right and for your society to enforce that right aren't the same thing. — Pfhorrest
For the concept of "property" to exist, the only thing required is law — Ciceronianus the White
A September 2017 study by the Federal Reserve reported that the top 1% owned 38.5% of the country's wealth in 2016. — Wikipedia
For the concept of "property" to exist, the only thing required is law — Ciceronianus the White
I don't think it is necessary to have a concept of property. — Andrew4Handel
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