Kinsella On Liberty

KOL395 | Selling Does Not Imply Ownership, and Vice-Versa: A Dissection (PFS 2022)

Sep 18, 2022
A lively breakdown of two common fallacies about selling and ownership. Short lessons on property as exclusionary rights and why homesteading and self-ownership matter. Clear distinctions between selling labor, information, and transferring title. A critique of mixing economic language with legal concepts to avoid confusion.
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INSIGHT

Scarcity Makes Resources Conflictable

  • Scarce resources are contestable and can produce conflict, so property rights exist to avoid fights over their use.
  • Kinsella labels these as conflictable resources to emphasize where property rules must apply.
INSIGHT

Property Is an Exclusionary Right

  • Property rights are exclusionary: they let owners prevent others from using a thing rather than granting unlimited use rights.
  • Other people's property rights, like a person's body, limit actions with your property, not your ownership itself.
INSIGHT

Best Link Determines Ownership

  • Property rules should assign resources to whoever has the best objective link to them so norms feel fair and are voluntarily respected.
  • Kinsella identifies self-ownership and homesteading as the two core links for bodies and external resources respectively.
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