Property Is Theft!
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Property Is Theft!

A Pierre-Joseph Proudhon Reader
 Web PDF
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ISBN-13:
9781849350556
Veröffentl:
2010
Einband:
Web PDF
Seiten:
670
Autor:
Pierre-Joseph Proudhon
eBook Typ:
PDF
eBook Format:
Reflowable Web PDF
Kopierschutz:
Adobe DRM [Hard-DRM]
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

The definitive English-language collection by the first man to call himself an anarchist.
The definitive English-language collection by the first man to call himself an anarchist.
Introduction, by Iain McKay

What is Property?
Chapter I. Method Pursued In This Work, The Idea of a Revolution
Chapter II. Property Considered as a Natural Right

1 Property as a Natural Right

2 Occupation, as the Title to Property

3 Civil Law as the Foundation and Sanction of Property
Chapter III. Labour As The Efficient Cause Of The Domain Of Property.

1 The Land cannot be Appropriated

2 Universal Consent no Justification of Property

3 Prescription Gives No Title to Property

4 Labour: That Labour Has No Inherent Power to Appropriate Natural Wealth

5 That Labour leads to Equality of Property

6 That in Society all Wages are Equal
Chapter IV. That property is impossible.
Chapter V. Psychological Exposition of the Idea of Justice

Letter to M.Blanqui on Property

Letter to Antoine Gauthier
Letter to Karl Marx

System of Economic Contradictions: Volume I
Chapter I: Of the Economic Science
Chapter II: Of Value
Chapter III: Economic Evolutions—First Period—The Division of Labour
Chapter IV: Second Period—Machinery

1. Of the function of machinery in its relations to liberty

2. Machinery's contradiction—Origin of capital and wage-labour

3. Of preservatives against the disastrous influence of machinery
Chapter V: Third Period—Competition

1. Necessity of competition.

2. Subversive effects of competition, and the destruction of liberty thereby.

3. Remedies against competition.
Chapter VI: Fourth Period—Monopoly

1. Necessity of monopoly

2. The disasters in labour and the perversion of ideas caused by monopoly.
Chapter VII: Fifth Period—Police, Or Taxation

System of Economic Contradictions: Volume II
Chapter X: Seventh Period: Credit

1. Origin and Development of the Idea of Credit
Chapter XI: Eighth Epoch—Property
Chapter XIV: Summary and Conclusion

Solution of the Social Problem
First Chapter: The Revolution in 1848
Chapter II: Democracy

Organisation of Credit and Circulation
Programme
The Bank of Exchange

Letter to Louis Blanc
Letter to Professor Chevalier

The Situation
The Reaction
The Mystification of Universal Suffrage
To Patriots
Opening Session of the National Assembly
Outline of the Social Question
Foreign Affairs
To the Editor-in-Chief of Le Representant du Peuple
The 15th July
Address to the Constituent National Assembly
The Malthusians
Toast to the Revolution
The Constitution and the Presidency
Election Manifesto of Le Peuple

Bank of the People
Declaration
Formation of the Company
Report of the Luxembourg Delegate and Workers' Corporation Commission
Chapter I: The People's Bank
Chapter II: Overview of contemplated production or consumption unions
Chapter III: General Consumers' Union and its Responsibilities

Confessions of a Revolutionary
Chapter III: Nature and Destination of Government
Chapter VI: 24th February: Provisional Government
Chapter X: June 23-26: The Cavaignac Reaction
Chapter XIV: 4th November: The Constitution
Chapter XVII: 1849, 29 January: Barrot-Falloux Reaction. Destruction of the Government
Chapter XVIII: 21st March: The Law On The Clubs; Legal Resistance
Chapter XXI: 8th July 1849: Conclusion

Resistance to the Revolution
I. Of the nature of the State
II. Of the end or object of the State
III. Of an ulterior destiny of the State

Letter to Pierre Leroux

In Connection with Louis Blanc

Interest and Principal
First Letter: 19th November 1849
Second Letter: 3rd December 1849
Third Letter: 17th December 1849
Fourth Letter: 31st December 1849
Fifth Letter: 21st January 1850
Sixth Letter: 11th February 1850

General Idea of the Revolution in the Nineteenth Century
First Study: Reaction Causes Revolution
Second Study: Is there Sufficient Reason for Revolution in the Nineteenth Century?
1. Law of Tendency in Society – The Revolution of 1789 has done only half its work
2. Chaos of economic forces.Tendency of society toward poverty
3. Anomaly of Government. Tendency toward Tyranny and Corruption
Third Study: The Principle of Association
Fourth Study: The Principle of Authority
Fifth Study: Social Liquidation.
Sixth Study: Organisation of Economic Forces
1. Credit
2. Property
3. Division of Labour, Collective Forces, Machines, Workers Companies
4. Constitution of Value. Organisation of Low Prices
5. Foreign Commerce. Balance of Imports and Exports
Seventh Study. Absorption of Government by the Economic Organism
Epilogue

The Philosophy of Progress
Foreword
First Letter: Of The Idea Of Progress
Second Letter: Of Certainty And Its Criterion

Letter to Villiaume

Stock Exchange Speculator's Manual
Preface
Final Considerations
3. Industrial democracy: Labour-labour partnership or universal
mutuality; end of the crisis
I. Workers' Associations
II. Consumers' associations

Justice In The Revolution And In The Church
Book I: Programme

I: The coming of the people to philosophy

II: The definition of philosophy

III: On the quality of the philosophical mind

IV: The origin of ideas

V: That metaphysics is within the province of primary instruction

VI: That philosophy must be essentially practical

VII: The character that must be presented by the guarantee of our
judgements and the rule of our actions – Conversion from
speculative to practical reason: determination of the criterion

VIII: Justice, the universal reason of things – Science and conscience

IX: Supremacy of Justice

X: Conditions for a philosophical propaganda

XI: Law of progress: Social destination
Book II: Little Political Catechism
First Instruction: Of the social power, considered in itself
Instruction II: Of the appropriation of the collective forces,
and the corruption of the social power
Instruction III: Of the forms of government and their evolution
during the pagan-christian period
Instruction IV: Constitution of social power by the Revolution
Instruction V: Question of the agenda

Letter to Milliet

The Federative Principle
First Part: Principle of Federation
Chapter VI: Posing of the Political Problem: Principle of Solution
Chapter VII: Extrication of the Idea of Federation
Chapter VIII: Progressive Constitution
Chapter X: Political Idealism: Efficiency of the Federal Guarantee
Chapter XI: Economic Sanction: Agricultural-Industrial Federation
Conclusion

Letter to M.X

The Political Capacity of the Working Classes
To Some Workers from Paris and Rouen Who Had Sought His
Views of the Elections
Second Part: Development of the worker idea: Creation of economic right
Chapter IV: 2. The mutualist system, or, on the Manifesto—Spontaneity of the idea of mutuality in the modern
masses—Definition
Chapter VIII: Application of the principle of mutuality to labour
and to wages—Of true commerce and agiotage
Chapter XIII: Association in mutuality
Chapter XV: Objections against mutualist policy. Answer. Main
cause of the fall of States—Relation of the political
and economic functions in the new Democracy
Third Part: Political Incompatibilities—Conclusion
Chapter IV: Municipal freedom: that this freedom, primarily federalistic
and incompatible with the unitary system, cannot be claimed
by the Opposition nor granted by the imperial Government

Appendix: The Theory of Property
Chapter IX: Summary

Appendix: The Paris Commune
International Worker’s Association: Federal Council of Parisian Section
On the Organisation of the Commune
Paris Today Is Free And In Possession Of Herself And The Provinces Are In Slavery
Declaration
Proposal on the Production of Goods

Index

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