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For and against ownership: William Godwin's theory of property

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posted on 2025-07-30, 15:27 authored by Robert Lamb
This article offers an interpretation of British philosopher William Godwin's theory of property ownership, as outlined in his Enquiry Concerning Political Justice. Godwin's work can be read as presenting an incoherent account of property rights, which, on the one hand, justifies its existence on seemingly utilitarian grounds while, on the other, impugns its legitimacy on egalitarian grounds. But the contradiction apparent in Godwin's position is actually illusory and can in fact be plausibly interpreted as comprising a coherent two-level understanding of political morality, wherein the right to own private property is best comprehended as a “right to do wrong.”

History

Notes

© 2009 University of Notre Dame. 12 month embargo by the publisher. Article will be released in April 2010.

Journal

The Review of Politics

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Language

en

Citation

71(2), pp.275-302

Department

  • Social and Political Sciences, Philosophy, and Anthropology

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