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what is property-第23章

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ke COVENANTS EITHER IMPLIED OR EXPRESSED; and established a balance。  Then these agreements and this balance were intended to secure to all equal comfort; then; by the law of contradictions; if isolation is the principle of inequality; society must produce equality。  The social balance is the equalization of the strong and the weak; for; while they are not equals; they are strangers; they can form no associations; they live as enemies。  Then; if inequality of conditions is a necessary evil; so is isolation; for society and inequality are incompatible with each other。  Then; if society is the true condition of man's existence; so is equality also。  This conclusion cannot be avoided。

This being so; how is it that; ever since the establishment of this balance; inequality has been on the increase?  How is it that justice and isolation always accompany each other?  Destutt de Tracy shall reply:


〃NEEDS and MEANS; RIGHTS and DUTIES; are products of the will。  If man willed nothing; these would not exist。  But to have needs and means; rights and duties; is to HAVE; to POSSESS; something。  They are so many kinds of property; using the word in its most general sense: they are things which belong to us。〃


Shameful equivocation; not justified by the necessity for generalization!  The word PROPERTY has two meanings:  1。 It designates the quality which makes a thing what it is; the attribute which is peculiar to it; and especially distinguishes it。  We use it in this sense when we say THE PROPERTIES OF THE TRIANGLE or of NUMBERS; THE PROPERTY OF THE MAGNET; &c。  2。 It expresses the right of absolute control over a thing by a free and intelligent being。  It is used in this sense by writers on jurisprudence。  Thus; in the phrase; IRON ACQUIRES THE PROPERTY OF A MAGNET; the word PROPERTY does not convey the same idea that it does in this one:  I HAVE ACQUIRED THIS MAGNET AS MY PROPERTY_。  To tell a poor man that he HAS property because he HAS arms and legs;that the hunger from which he suffers; and his power to sleep in the open air are his property;is to play upon words; and to add insult to injury。


〃The sole basis of the idea of property is the idea of personality。  As soon as property is born at all; it is born; of necessity; in all its fulness。  As soon as an individual knows HIMSELF;his moral personality; his capacities of enjoyment; suffering; and action;he necessarily sees also that this SELF is exclusive proprietor of the body in which it dwells; its organs; their powers; faculties; &c。 。 。 。  Inasmuch as artificial and conventional property exists; there must be natural property also; for nothing can exist in art without its counterpart in Nature。〃


We ought to admire the honesty and judgment of philosophers!  Man has properties; that is; in the first acceptation of the term; faculties。  He has property; that is; in its second acceptation; the right of domain。  He has; then; the property of the property of being proprietor。  How ashamed I should be to notice such foolishness; were I here considering only the authority of Destutt de Tracy!  But the entire human race; since the origination of society and language; when metaphysics and dialectics were first born; has been guilty of this puerile confusion of thought。  All which man could call his own was identified in his mind with his person。  He considered it as his property; his wealth; a part of himself; a member of his body; a faculty of his mind。  The possession of things was likened to property in the powers of the body and mind; and on this false analogy was based the right of property;THE IMITATION OF NATURE BY ART; as Destutt de Tracy so elegantly puts it。

But why did not this ideologist perceive that man is not proprietor even of his own faculties?  Man has powers; attributes; capacities; they are given him by Nature that he may live; learn; and love: he does not own them; but has only the use of them; and he can make no use of them that does not harmonize with Nature's laws。  If he had absolute mastery over his faculties; he could avoid hunger and cold; he could eat unstintedly; and walk through fire; he could move mountains; walk a hundred leagues in a minute; cure without medicines and by the sole force of his will; and could make himself immortal。  He could say; 〃I wish to produce;〃 and his tasks would be finished with the words; he could say。  〃I wish to know;〃 and he would know; 〃I love;〃 and he would enjoy。  What then?  Man is not master of himself; but may be of his surroundings。  Let him use the wealth of Nature; since he can live only by its use; but let him abandon his pretensions to the title of proprietor; and remember that he is called so only metaphorically。

To sum up:  Destutt de Tracy classes together the external PRODUCTIONS of nature and art; and the POWERS or FACULTIES of man; making both of them species of property; and upon this equivocation he hopes to establish; so firmly that it can never be disturbed; the right of property。  But of these different kinds of property some are INNATE; as memory; imagination; strength; and beauty; while others are ACQUIRED; as land; water; and forests。  In the state of Nature or isolation; the strongest and most skilful (that is; those best provided with innate property) stand the best chance of obtaining acquired property。  Now; it is to prevent this encroachment and the war which results therefrom; that a balance (justice) has been employed; and covenants (implied or expressed) agreed upon: it is to correct; as far as possible; inequality of innate property by equality of acquired property。  As long as the division remains unequal; so long the partners remain enemies; and it is the purpose of the covenants to reform this state of things。  Thus we have; on the one hand; isolation; inequality; enmity; war; robbery; murder; on the other; society; equality; fraternity; peace; and love。  Choose between them!

M。 Joseph Dutensa physician; engineer; and geometrician; but a very poor legist; and no philosopher at allis the author of a 〃Philosophy of Political Economy;〃 in which he felt it his duty to break lances in behalf of property。  His reasoning seems to be borrowed from Destutt de Tracy。  He commences with this definition of property; worthy of Sganarelle:  〃Property is the right by which a thing is one's own。〃  Literally translated:  Property is the right of property。

After getting entangled a few times on the subjects of will; liberty; and personality; after having distinguished between IMMATERIAL…NATURAL property; and MATERIAL…NATURAL property; a distinction similar to Destutt de Tracy's of innate and acquired property;M。 Joseph Dutens concludes with these two general propositions:  1。 Property is a natural and inalienable right of every man; 2。 Inequality of property is a necessary result of Nature;which propositions are convertible into a simpler one:  All men have an equal right of unequal property。

He rebukes M。 de Sismondi for having taught that landed property has no other basis than law and conventionality; and he says himself; speaking of the respect which people feel for property; that 〃their good sense reveals to them the nature of the ORIGINAL CONTRACT made between society and proprietors。〃

He confounds property with possession; communism with equality; the just with the natural; and the natural with the possible。  Now he takes these different ideas to be equivalents; now he seems to distinguish between them; so much so that it would be infinitely easier to refute him than to understand him。  Attracted first by the title of the work; 〃Philosophy of Political Economy;〃 I have found; among the author's obscurities; only the most ordinary ideas。  For that reason I will not speak of him。

M。 Cousin; in his 〃Moral Philosophy;〃 page 15; teaches that all morality; all laws; all rights are given to man with this injunction:  〃FREE BEING; REMAIN FREE。〃  Bravo! master; I wish to remain free if I can。  He continues:

〃Our principle is true; it is good; it is social。  Do not fear to push it to its ultimate。

〃1。 If the human person is sacred; its whole nature is sacred; and particularly its interior actions; its feelings; its thoughts; its voluntary decisions。  This accounts for the re
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