or else the abiding law must be seen as merely arbitrary and the whole concept of property, whether communal or private, becomes ultimately arbitrary. — Janus
And that is the point that I am disagreeing with. It is only valid in a communist or fantasy world. Not one that I inhabit. — A Seagull
Not really: you can mutilate and destroy your hammer if you like, but you cannot legally, or ethically, mutilate and destroy your dog. — Janus
I don't agree that everything privately owned is stolen from the community, and I think if pressed David and those like him won't either, making a distinction between "personal" and "private" property, where "personal" is rightfully owned by an individual and "private" is something that rightfully belongs to the community but from which most of said community are wrongly excluded. That's just a terminological thing though. Some things owned by individuals ("private property") are rightfully so, others aren't. If the community takes the latter, that's not theft but justice, and an individual taking it back again is just theft again. — Pfhorrest
The assignment of ownership, besides the one necessary ownership of one’s own body, is entirely a contingent social fact. — Pfhorrest
Disposal and sale are not necessary conditions of ownership. Lack of ability to do so just means you can’t stop owning it.You don't necessarily own your body at least until you are dead. Because you cannot dispose of it, you cannot sell it or at least, arguably you didn't ought to be able to — unenlightened
Either property (and theft) are inalienable rights (in which case the original acquisition of land was almost certainly theft), or property (and theft) are just pragmatic legal definitions of the current community, in which case a government stepping in to change them is nothing bu democracy in action and should be supported. — Isaac
Maybe I shouldn't be entitled to my forty room mansion and hundreds of acres while down the road people are sleeping in doorways. Or maybe I should pay some land tax at least, and maybe My kids should pay some inheritance tax. After all, I already pay purchase tax on my socks. And maybe that tax is owed to those people who have no property.
We could discuss things like this, if we were not religiously committed to the sacredness of property ownership. — unenlightened
Perhaps your body owns you — unenlightened
With you top of the pile. — Professor Death
This is a bit picky, but since this is philosophy, I'll just come out and say it. You don't necessarily own your body at least until you are dead. Because you cannot dispose of it, you cannot sell it or at least, arguably you didn't ought to be able to. I think Shakespeare had something to say about this. — unenlightened
The problem with this line of thinking is that it justifies society telling you what you can and can't do with your own body, — Marchesk
That this is mine seems to be inevitable, as much a part of being human as having hands. — Banno
it just intuitively feels that my relation to my body is not a property relation — unenlightened
I think that is perhaps because of what you take a property relation to be.
People like me who say our bodies are our own property take ownership of property to be identical to having claim rights to a thing. — Pfhorrest
I am not a Cartesian dualist. — unenlightened
To say the one necessarily owns one’s body is just to say that those rights one has over their own body are inalienable. — Pfhorrest
there is a division like of software and hardware — Pfhorrest
Burglary is experienced as a violation almost like an assault - almost like rape. Entering my home without my permission is like entering me — unenlightened
Ships have hands; humans are hands.
As I said at the outset, the property relation is one of identification and NOT one of identity. ME and mine have to be different in order to be in relation. — unenlightened
But that's rather a long way from shooting trespassers and rioters. — unenlightened
I'll just come out and say it. You don't necessarily own your body at least until you are dead. — unenlightened
Ownership comes down to what you can defend or control, — A Seagull
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