HREQ 2010 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Justice As Fairness, Responsible Government

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The importance of property: p(cid:396)ope(cid:396)t(cid:455) is o(cid:374)e sou(cid:396)(cid:272)e of hu(cid:373)a(cid:374) (cid:396)ights o(cid:396), at least, (cid:272)i(cid:448)il (cid:396)ights. In our society today we judge people based on what they own: property today has not lost its importance. Homeownership, for example, is (cid:272)o(cid:374)side(cid:396)ed a sig(cid:374)ifi(cid:272)a(cid:374)t goal a(cid:374)d (cid:858)sig(cid:374) of su(cid:272)(cid:272)ess(cid:859) i(cid:374) ou(cid:396) so(cid:272)iet(cid:455) we are definitely often judged o(cid:374) the (cid:271)asis of (cid:858)(cid:449)hat (cid:449)e o(cid:449)(cid:374). (cid:859) Hobbes claimed that humans emerge from a savage and destructive state of nature only through the power of the state. Humans, in other words, are made good through the state. In exchange for the support of the population, the state would ensure a certain amount of rights to its citizens. Security makes property possible as well as the rights that come with it. In contrast, locke argued that humans created their own rights in and through a state of nature. In addition, they cultivated property and produced through their own labor before the rise of the state.

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