Contents Acknowledgments Cover Art Note Bibliographic Note Prologue PART I CLAIM AND TITLE: ORIGINS The Meaning of Property in Things Property Is a Universal and Uniquely Human Custom Humans Locate the Meaning of Property within a Thing All Animals Use Things, Specifically Food Food Is Unlikely to Be the Original Object of Property Tools Have Potential Because of How We Make and Use Them Symbolic Thought Makes Meaning Possible Meaning Makes Composite Tools Possible Primates Socially Transmit Tool Practices, but Humans share Meaning-Laden Customs Tool Use Is Embodied Knowledge Property Embodies the Claim “This Is Mine!” Humans Socially Transmit Property with Moral Force What Is Right Is Not Taken Out of the Rule, but Let the Rule Arise Out of What Is Right What Is Right Is Not Derived from the Rule But the Rule Arises from Our Knowledge of What Is Right Two Different Experiments Illustrate the Proposition Beginning with What Is Meant by “What Is Right” Resentment Prompts People to Act Property Emerges to Protect Us from Real and Positive Hurt The Custom of Property Is Physically Contained Etymology Evidences Both Custom and Containment A Linguistic Convention Emerges with the Tiny Word “In” The Semantics of “In a Thing” Physically Contain Property Eventually the Use of “Property in a Thing” Wanes But “I Have Property in X” Conveys Richer Meaning Than “X Is My Property” | ) 2 4 3 |X xiii xvii xix 5 |5 22 23 25 29 37 42 44 47 57 60 66 68 69 75 80 85 88 88 92 97 100 1073