Philosophics 
— Philosophical and Political Ramblings podcast

The Enclosure Within: The Hidden Roots of Property Theory

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This is a 'bonus' episode inasmuch as it summarises the two property essays together as a unit.

Language philosopher Bry Willis argues that the true origin of private property is not found in physical fences or legal deeds, but in a hidden psychological shift within the human self. This internal "inflation" occurs when a reflexively aware being converts the simple biological urge to survive into a moral claim of entitlement. By examining the transition from "I want to continue" to "I am right to exclude others," the author suggests that self-preservation is falsely rebranded as justice. This silent grammatical move serves as the unexamined foundation for all scales of ownership, from picking an apple to inheriting vast estates. Ultimately, the text posits that property critique fails if it only targets external institutions, as the primary enclosure begins within the self’s own perspective. Changing who owns the land is futile if the underlying vocabulary of warrant remains unchallenged.👉 https://substack.com/home/post/p-195188257

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