What is Property?. P. J. PROUDHON

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу What is Property? - P. J. PROUDHON страница 24

Автор:
Серия:
Издательство:
What is Property? - P. J. PROUDHON

Скачать книгу

we judge best fitted to complete our unfinished work.

      They did not foresee.... But why need I go farther?

      The consequences are plain enough, and this is not the time to criticise the whole Code.

      The history of property among the ancient nations is, then, simply a matter of research and curiosity. It is a rule of jurisprudence that the fact does not substantiate the right. Now, property is no exception to this rule: then the universal recognition of the right of property does not legitimate the right of property. Man is mistaken as to the constitution of society, the nature of right, and the application of justice; just as he was mistaken regarding the cause of meteors and the movement of the heavenly bodies. His old opinions cannot be taken for articles of faith. Of what consequence is it to us that the Indian race was divided into four classes; that, on the banks of the Nile and the Ganges, blood and position formerly determined the distribution of the land; that the Greeks and Romans placed property under the protection of the gods; that they accompanied with religious ceremonies the work of partitioning the land and appraising their goods? The variety of the forms of privilege does not sanction injustice. The faith of Jupiter, the proprietor, 13 proves no more against the equality of citizens, than do the mysteries of Venus, the wanton, against conjugal chastity.

      The authority of the human race is of no effect as evidence in favor of the right of property, because this right, resting of necessity upon equality, contradicts its principle; the decision of the religions which have sanctioned it is of no effect, because in all ages the priest has submitted to the prince, and the gods have always spoken as the politicians desired; the social advantages, attributed to property, cannot be cited in its behalf, because they all spring from the principle of equality of possession.

      What means, then, this dithyramb upon property?

      "The right of property is the most important of human institutions."...

      Yes; as monarchy is the most glorious.

      "The original cause of man's prosperity upon earth."

      Because justice was supposed to be its principle.

      "Property became the legitimate end of his ambition, the hope of his existence, the shelter of his family; in a word, the corner-stone of the domestic dwelling, of communities, and of the political State."

      Possession alone produced all that.

      "Eternal principle,—"

      Property is eternal, like every negation,—

      "Of all social and civil institutions."

      For that reason, every institution and every law based on property will perish.

      "It is a boon as precious as liberty."

      For the rich proprietor.

      "In fact, the cause of the cultivation of the habitable earth."

      If the cultivator ceased to be a tenant, would the land be worse cared for?

      "The guarantee and the morality of labor."

      Under the regime of property, labor is not a condition, but a privilege.

      "The application of justice."

      What is justice without equality of fortunes? A balance with false weights.

      "All morality,—"

      A famished stomach knows no morality,—

      "All public order,—"

      Certainly, the preservation of property,—

      "Rest on the right of property." 14

      Corner-stone of all which is, stumbling-block of all which ought to be,—such is property.

      To sum up and conclude:—

      Not only does occupation lead to equality, it PREVENTS property. For, since every man, from the fact of his existence, has the right of occupation, and, in order to live, must have material for cultivation on which he may labor; and since, on the other hand, the number of occupants varies continually with the births and deaths,—it follows that the quantity of material which each laborer may claim varies with the number of occupants; consequently, that occupation is always subordinate to population. Finally, that, inasmuch as possession, in right, can never remain fixed, it is impossible, in fact, that it can ever become property.

      Every occupant is, then, necessarily a possessor or usufructuary,—a function which excludes proprietorship. Now, this is the right of the usufructuary: he is responsible for the thing entrusted to him; he must use it in conformity with general utility, with a view to its preservation and development; he has no power to transform it, to diminish it, or to change its nature; he cannot so divide the usufruct that another shall perform the labor while he receives the product. In a word, the usufructuary is under the supervision of society, submitted to the condition of labor and the law of equality.

      Thus is annihilated the Roman definition of property—THE RIGHT OF USE AND ABUSE—an immorality born of violence, the most monstrous pretension that the civil laws ever sanctioned. Man receives his usufruct from the hands of society, which alone is the permanent possessor. The individual passes away, society is deathless.

      What a profound disgust fills my soul while discussing such simple truths! Do we doubt these things to-day? Will it be necessary to again take arms for their triumph? And can force, in default of reason, alone introduce them into our laws?

      ALL HAVE AN EQUAL RIGHT OF OCCUPANCY.

      THE AMOUNT OCCUPIED BEING MEASURED, NOT BY THE WILL, BUT BY THE VARIABLE CONDITIONS OF SPACE AND NUMBER, PROPERTY CANNOT EXIST.

      This no code has ever expressed; this no constitution can admit! These are axioms which the civil law and the law of nations deny!.....

      But I hear the exclamations of the partisans of another system: "Labor, labor! that is the basis of property!"

      Reader, do not be deceived. This new basis of property is worse than the first, and I shall soon have to ask your pardon for having demonstrated things clearer, and refuted pretensions more unjust, than any which we have yet considered.

      Конец ознакомительного фрагмента.

      Текст предоставлен ООО «ЛитРес».

      Прочитайте эту книгу целиком, купив полную легальную версию на ЛитРес.

      Безопасно оплатить книгу можно банковской картой Visa, MasterCard, Maestro, со счета мобильного телефона, с платежного терминала, в салоне МТС или Связной, через PayPal, WebMoney, Яндекс.Деньги, QIWI Кошелек, бонусными картами или

Скачать книгу