Proudhon: What is Property?This is a 1994 translation of one of the classics of the traditions of anarchism and socialism. Pierre-Joseph Proudhon was a contemporary of Marx and one of the most acute, influential and subversive critics of modern French and European society. His What is Property? (1840) produced the answer 'Property is theft'; the book itself has become a classic of political thought through its wide-ranging and deep-reaching critique of private property as at once the essential institution of Western culture and the root cause of greed, corruption, political tyranny, social division and violation of natural law. A critical and historical introduction situates Proudhon's 'diabolical work' (as he called it) in the context of nineteenth-century social and legal controversy and of the history of political thought in general. |
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Continguts
Preface | 3 |
Method followed in this work Idea of a revolution | 13 |
Property considered as a natural right Occupation | 35 |
Labour as the efficient cause of the domain of property | 67 |
That property is impossible | 117 |
Psychological exposition of the idea of the just and | 170 |
Notes | 218 |
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
Proudhon: What is Property? Pierre-Joseph Proudhon,Joseph Pierre Previsualització no disponible - 1994 |
Frases i termes més freqüents
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Referències a aquest llibre
Development and Underdevelopment in Historical Perspective: Populism ... G. N. Kitching Previsualització no disponible - 1989 |
Adam Smith's Mistake: How a Moral Philosopher Invented Economics & Ended ... Kenneth Lux Visualització de fragments - 1990 |