Saturday, October 12, 2019
The Theory Of Property :: essays research papers
 The Theory of Property           While Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary defines property as "something  regarded as being possessed by, or at the disposal of, a person or group of  persons species or class," (p. 1078) this definition hardly holds the  connotations so emphatically discussed by the anthropologist Morgan. To Morgan,  "property has been so immense...so diversified its uses so expanding...that it  has become...an unmanageable power." (p.561) Why has it become such an  unmanageable power? Morgan answers this question with the simple answer that it  is due to the linear evolution of the social institution of property from being  collectively owned to being individually owned which has planted the seed of its  own destruction in modern society. Morgan, in an attempt to study the role  property has played in shaping social structures throughout history, has  concluded that the influences property has had on reshaping societies and vice  versa can teach the historian many things about both the society being studied  and the environment in which it strove to survive. To Morgan, the "germ" of the  institution of property slowly infected many different societies in many  different parts of the world. His teleological approach states that due to the  "unity of mankind" various technological innovations, which gave rise to the  ever-growing availability of property, allowed social change to occur in many  areas of the globe independently. Every area, went through its own version of  evolution in which the importance of wealth grew at varying rates. This  discovery leads Morgan to believe that while the past was unified in its  variation, it is the future which must presently be addressed. For Morgan, in  studying the past one can learn much about the future. Not only does Morgan  analyze the social emergence of various types of property, but he is also  extremely interested in the human tendencies evident in various societies which  surfaced as a result of the ever-growing list of ownable objects. As time  progressed from the Status of Savagery through Barbarism and into Civilization  new wants and needs arose mostly due to new inventions. It is on this  relationship between property, technology, and the human desire for more of each  which Morgan centers his work, and it is from this study which he hopes future  generations will learn how to improve their institutions until they can be  improved no more.       Morgan structures his essay around three basic "ethnical periods of  human progress" (p. 535) and the basic assumption that the more modes of  production and subsistence there are the greater the proliferation of individual  objects of ownership. As technology advances and discoveries are made, the  amount of ownable objects grow as does the need to own.  					    
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