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  1. Imposing Duties and Original Appropriation.Bas van der Vossen - 2015 - Journal of Political Philosophy 23 (1):64-85.
  • Considerações sobre o fundamento moral da propriedade.Luiz Felipe Netto Andrade E. Silv Sahded - 2007 - Kriterion: Journal of Philosophy 48 (115):219-234.
  • Considerações sobre o fundamento moral da propriedade.Luiz Felipe Netto de Andrade E. Silva Sahd - 2007 - Kriterion: Journal of Philosophy 48 (115):219-234.
  • Considerações sobre o fundamento moral da propriedade.Luiz Felipe Netto de Andrade E. Silv Sahd - 2007 - Kriterion: Journal of Philosophy 48 (115):219-234.
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  • Locke on land and labor.Daniel Russell - 2004 - Philosophical Studies 117 (1-2):303-325.
  • Legitimate Expectations and Land.Margaret Moore - 2017 - Moral Philosophy and Politics 4 (2):229-255.
    This paper focuses on land as a domain in which legitimate expectations can give rise to entitlements. The central argument is that people are connected to other people and to projects, which are symbolically and materially rooted in particular places. This gives rise to an interest – an interest that is sufficiently weighty that it imposes obligations on other people – to protect stability of place. There are two ways in which legitimate expectations structure argument about land. It justifies liberty (...)
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  • The First-Person Form of Life: Locke, Sterne, and the Autobiographical Animal.Heather Keenleyside - 2012 - Critical Inquiry 39 (1):116-141.
    This essay begins from Michel Foucault’s famous claim that life did not exist until the end of the eighteenth-century, and considers how eighteenth-century experiments with the literary genre of the “life” might be related to emerging ideas of life as a distinct form of being. It does this by focusing on one of the period’s most well known lives, and on one of its most prominent philosophers: Laurence Sterne’s The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, and John Locke. Readers have (...)
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  • Rights, Obligations and the Binding Force of Contracts in Roman Law and in Natural Law Theory.Axel Hägerström - 2022 - Grotiana 43 (2):309-393.
  • Back to bundles: Deflating property rights, again.Shane Nicholas Glackin - 2014 - Legal Theory 20 (1):1-24.
    Following Wesley Hohfeld's pioneering analyses, which demonstrated that the concept of ownership conflated a variety of distinct legal relations, a deflationary regarding those relations as essentially unconnected held sway for much of the subsequent century. In recent decades, this theory has been thought too diffuse; it seems counterintuitive to insist, for instance, that rights of possession and alienation over a property are associated only contingently. Accordingly, scholars such as James Penner and James Harris have advanced theories that revive the concept (...)
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  • Self-Ownership, World Ownership, and Equality: Part II: G. A. COHEN.G. A. Cohen - 1986 - Social Philosophy and Policy 3 (2):77-96.
    1. The present paper is a continuation of my “Self-Ownership, World Ownership, and Equality,” which began with a description of the political philosophy of Robert Nozick. I contended in that essay that the foundational claim of Nozick's philosophy is the thesis of self-ownership, which says that each person is the morally rightful owner of his own person and powers, and, consequently, that each is free to use those powers as he wishes, provided that he does not deploy them aggressively against (...)
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  • Límites y licencias a la apropiación privada en el estado de naturaleza según John Locke.Joan Severo Chumbita - 2019 - Isegoría 60:303-324.
    Este trabajo estudia críticamente seis posibles límites a la apropiación privada, individual, unilateral y desigual en el estado de naturaleza descripto por John Locke. I) la restricción expresada bajo la forma de dejar suficiente y tan bueno en común para otros; II) la prohibición del desperdicio de los frutos perecederos; III) asociada a esta segunda condición pero aplicada a la tierra, la prohibición de cercar tierra cuyos frutos se desperdicie; IV) la limitación propuesta por Macpherson, según la cual es una (...)
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  • El desplazamiento en la teoría de la propiedad de John Locke: del criterio de necesidad a la teoría del valor para justificar la colonización inglesa en América.Joan Chumbita - 2011 - Cuyo 28 (2):25-52.
    La teoría de la propiedad de Locke tiene como escenario el estado de naturaleza, cuyo correlato empírico es la colonización inglesa de América. Este es el supuesto que permite articular la apelación a la teología para fundar la propiedad privada de modo unilateral y en cualquier lugar del mundo; el desplazamiento del criterio de necesidad a la teoría del valor para justificarla; así como el supuesto de abundancia que la hace posible sin requerir pacto político ni consenso social. En este (...)
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