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(2010) Anarchism and moral philosophy, Dordrecht, Springer.
Autonomy, taxation and ownership
an anarchist critique of Kant's theory of property
Kory DeClark
pp. 69-85
Property fundamentally affects liberty. When any two individuals occupy space in a finite area, the choices of one will, in principle, and usually in practice, limit the liberties of the other. For instance, if I am sitting in a public park, then you can sit anywhere you please so long as you do not want to sit in the very space I occupy, for I am already sitting there and you have no right to move me. But if, as it turns out, you own the park, then some would say you do have a right to sit in the space I currently occupy, for I have no right to be there. Property, by limiting the sphere of our available and legitimate actions, has this clear and elemental effect on liberty.
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Full citation:
DeClark, K. (2010)., Autonomy, taxation and ownership: an anarchist critique of Kant's theory of property, in B. Franks & M. Wilson (eds.), Anarchism and moral philosophy, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 69-85.
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