Difference between revisions of "What is Property?"
From The Libertarian Labyrinth
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Latest revision as of 19:20, 27 January 2018
What is Property? Or, An Inquiry Into The Principle of Right and of Government
Contents
First Memoir:
- CHAPTER I: Method Pursued In This Work.—The Idea of a Revolution.
- CHAPTER II: Property Considered As A Natural Right.—Occupation And Civil Law As Efficient Bases of Property.—Definitions.
- Property as a Natural Right.
- Occupation as the Title to Property.
- Civil Law as the Foundation and Sanction of Property.
- CHAPTER III: Labor As The Efficient Cause of the Domain of Property
- The Land cannot be appropriated.
- Universal Consent no Justification of Property.
- Prescription gives no Title to Property.
- Labor.--That Labor has no Inherent Power to appropriate Natural Wealth.
- That Labor leads to Equality of Property.
- That in Society all Wages are Equal.
- That Inequality of Powers is the Necessary Condition of Equality of Fortunes.
- That, from the stand-point of Justice, Labor destroys Property.
- CHAPTER IV: That Property Is Impossible
- Demonstration
- Axiom: Property is the Right of Increase claimed by the Proprietor over any thing which he has stamped as his own.
- First Proposition: Property is Impossible, because it demands Something for Nothing.
- Second Proposition: Property is Impossible, because, wherever it exists, Production costs more than it is worth.
- Third Proposition: Property is Impossible, because, with a given Capital, Production is proportional to Labor, not to Property.
- Fourth Proposition: Property is Impossible, because it is Homicide.
- Fifth Proposition: Property is Impossible, because, if it exists, Society devours itself.
- Appendix to the Fifth Proposition.
- Sixth Proposition: Property is Impossible, because it is the Mother of Tyranny.
- Seventh Proposition: Property is Impossible, because, in consuming its Receipts, it loses them; in hoarding them, it nullifies them; and, in using them as Capital, it turns them against Production.
- Eighth Proposition: Property is Impossible, because its Power of Accumulation is infinite, and is exercised only over Finite Quantities.
- Ninth Proposition: Property is Impossible, because it is powerless against Property.
- Tenth Proposition: Property is Impossible, because it is the Negation of Equality.
- Chapter V: Psychological Exposition of the Idea of Justice and In Justice, and a Determination of the Principle of Government and of Right
- Second Memoir: Letter to M. Blanqui on Property