
Language philosopher Bry Willis re-evaluates Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s classic critique of property by suggesting that the physical act of fencing off land is merely a symptom of a prior internal enclosure of the self. Bry Willis argues that before an individual claims external territory, they perform a metaphysical inflation where the biological drive to persist is falsely converted into a moral entitlement to exclude others. By deconstructing the alibis of labour and inheritance, the text reveals that modern property systems are designed to transform the violence of exclusion into a respected social command. Ultimately, the author contends that true reform requires more than rearranging ownership; it necessitates addressing the underlying grammar of the self that views the world as a commodity to be possessed.
👉 https://brywillis634737.substack.com/p/the-fence-before-the-field
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