Jonathan Loesberg
Jonathan Loesberg
originally posted by Cliff:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
[L]ibertarians regularly appeal to Locke for their insistence on an untrammeled property right. I don't think they are consistent in their reading, nor do they really attend to the kinds of constraints Locke does put on the rights to property, but it doesn't follow that there isn't a conservative reading of Locke.
This means that present-day Anglo-American conservatives can find things in Locke that they like but have to ignore all those puritanical parts that tell them they can't exactly do whatever they want with their money -- or they can, but then they're going to hell. Yes?
Not just the puritanical parts. I give them that since one can read the political theory without it. But Locke also imagined limits on property rights based on the way large acquisition of property limits the rights of further property acquisition by those who come later or reduces the value of property acquired by others. His view of the right in its essential state was not based on scarceness and his theory did factor in the way scarceness could limit it.
The refusal to set any statute of limitations on property rights also has the pretty clear consequence of supporting the African American claim to reparations. Nozick recognized this, but I haven't seen it as among the positions libertarians generally take.