HAT Forum - Private Property and Common Ground
Details
The Humanist Association of Toronto
http://www.humanisttoronto.ca/
Every Saturday we meet on Zoom to discuss a topic decided upon the previous week. These are topics of humanist interest, from a humanist perspective.
The topic of the discussion will be decided in a prior meeting, usually two weeks in advance. This week’s topic is: Private Property and Common Ground, introduced by Paul Kaplan
Private property and common ground were two central concepts in the 18th century Enlightenment. The English Enlightenment philosopher, John Locke, identified life, liberty, and property as fundamental rights. Consider this passage from The Greatest Sentence Ever Written by Walter Isaacson:
“When men enter into a social contract to empower a government, he [Locke] writes, it is done ‘with an intention in every one the better to preserve himself, his liberty and property.’” p. 25.
Another central concept of the Enlightenment is common ground. Common ground can be understood by examples. Issacson gives the examples of the public works of Benjamin Franklin:
“He [Franklin] not only helped the craft the sentence [in the American Declaration of Independence] that defines our common ground, he lived it. He organized police, fire, and street-sweeping; corps; a public library, hospital, and school; a widows’ pension fund, and a mutual insurance cooperative.” p. 40.
Question to Consider
- Is property a basic human right?
- Are there limits on private property? For example, you can own a car but you can’t drive it without a government issued license.
- Should governments have the power to expropriate private property without compensation?
- Should governments be able exercise eminent domain for public purposes?
- What should be included in the common ground?
- How should the common ground be funded?
- What should the process be for determining what is private and what is in the common ground?
- Why do countries differ in what is private and what is in the common ground?
- What should the limits be on government power as governments levy taxes and administer the common ground?
Meet our diverse group, trade perspectives in a free and open forum and learn from others as they learn from you!
BTW: don't be concerned if there are not many RSVP’s. Many HAT members attend regularly but don’t sign up on Meetup. Our online meetings have been very popular with 20-30 attendees.
NOTE: The HAT Forum adheres strictly to the City of Toronto Policy on Non-Discrimination (http://www.the519.org/public/content/policy-files/The519SpaceUsePolicy.pdf)
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