What is Property? An Inquiry into the Principle of Right and of Government

audiobook

What is Property? An Inquiry into the Principle of Right and of Government

by P.-J. (Pierre-Joseph) Proudhon

EN·~15 hours·18 chapters

Chapters

18 total

WHAT IS PROPERTY? - AN INQUIRY INTO THE PRINCIPLE OF RIGHT AND OF GOVERNMENT

0:04

By P. J. Proudhon

3:21

Linked Contents

0:01

P. J. PROUDHON: HIS LIFE AND HIS WORKS.

1:04:10

PREFACE.

22:27

WHAT IS PROPERTY? OR, - AN INQUIRY INTO THE PRINCIPLE OF RIGHT AND OF GOVERNMENT.

0:05

CHAPTER I. METHOD PURSUED IN THIS WORK.—THE IDEA OF A REVOLUTION.

57:06

CHAPTER II. PROPERTY CONSIDERED AS A NATURAL RIGHT

1:19:24

CHAPTER III. LABOR AS THE EFFICIENT CAUSE OF THE DOMAIN OF PROPERTY.

2:05:53

CHAPTER IV. THAT PROPERTY IS IMPOSSIBLE.

1:21:43

Description

This work launches a thorough investigation into the very idea of ownership, questioning whether property can truly be regarded as a natural right. It begins by dissecting the conventional justifications—occupation, civil law, and the notion that labor alone creates a legitimate claim—while exposing the gaps in each argument.

From there the author builds a striking series of propositions that declare property impossible, linking it to contradictions such as “something for nothing,” the erosion of productive value, and the perpetuation of inequality. The text weaves together economic reasoning, moral philosophy, and social observation, showing how the accumulation of wealth can lead to tyranny and undermine collective well‑being.

Beyond the economic critique, the treatise explores how these ideas shape notions of justice and the very foundations of government. Its rigorous, yet accessible style invites listeners to reconsider familiar assumptions about rights, labor, and the structures that govern our societies.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~15 hours (876K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Mike Lough, and David Widger

Release date

1995-11-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

P.-J. (Pierre-Joseph) Proudhon

P.-J. (Pierre-Joseph) Proudhon

1809–1865

Best known for the provocative phrase "property is theft," this 19th-century French thinker helped shape modern anarchist and socialist debate. His writing mixes fierce political argument with close attention to work, justice, and everyday economic life.

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