| | The Right to Property » The Anthropik Network (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07) |
 | | For Locke, the right to property comes from the application of one's time, talents and labor to an object; it is that part of nature which an individual transforms into something useful and valuable. |
 | | In a sense, then, Locke's property rights are already relying on circular logic: human property rights are dependent on divine property rights, so that we have a right to property because there is a right to property. |
 | | One is that the "right to property" is devalued from the realm of sacred rights, to mere practicality. |
| anthropik.com /2005/07/the-right-to-property (2818 words) |