Thinking about Property: From Antiquity to the Age of Revolution

Thinking about Property

From Antiquity to the Age of Revolution

2007 • 288 pages

This book explores ancient 'foundational' texts relating to property and their reception by later thinkers in their various contexts up to the early nineteenth century. The texts include Plato's vision of an ideal polity in the Republic, Jesus' teachings on renunciation and poverty, and Golden Age narratives and other evolutionary accounts of the transition of mankind from primeval communality to regimes of ownership. The issue of the legitimacy of private ownership exercises the minds of the major political thinkers as well as theologians and jurists throughout the ages. The book gives full consideration to the historical development of Rights Theory, with special reference to the right to property. It ends with a comparative study of the Declarations of Rights in the American and French Revolutions and seeks to explain, with reference to contemporary documents, why the French recognised an inalienable, human right to property whereas the Americans did not.


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Series

21 released books

Ideas in Context

Ideas in Context is a 21-book series with 21 released primary works first released in 1984 with contributions by J.G.A. Pocock, Laurence Dickey, and Peter Novick.


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