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    Why Do Philosophers Talk so Much and Read so Little About the Stone Age?

    False factual claims in appropriation-based property theory

    Karl Widerquist

    Visiting Associate Professor, Georgetown University-Qatar

    [email protected]

    Word Count: 9,523

    NOTE: Self-citations in this article refer to: Karl Widerquist A Dilemma for Libertarianism,

    Politics, Philosophy, and Economics8, No. 1, February 2009, pp. 43-72.

    Introduction

    Political philosophers often talk about the Stone Age. They tell stories about the state of

    nature, the origin of government, and the appropriation of property, all of which occurred in

    prehistory, but they seldom refer to evidence of what actually happened in the Stone or Bronze

    Ages. Political philosophy (or political theory)1 is not an empirical discipline, but it cannot be

    unconcerned with the truth of factual claims. On many issues, philosophers are very good about

    treating truth claims appropriately. For example, the philosophical debate on the ethics of global

    warming is well informed by primary research. But when it comes to the Stone Age, many

    philosophers make (and seem willing to accept) broad pronouncements with little or no

    supporting evidence.

    Perhaps they believe their claims are obviously true. If so, they must be prepared to back

    them up if they turn out to be controversial. Perhaps they only intend to examine the

    ramifications of controversial factual claims without researching them. If so, they must admit

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    that their conclusions are tentative. Perhaps they believe fact checking is the job of another

    discipline. Unfortunately, there are no empirical researchers trolling through philosophical

    journals looking for claims to investigate. If we neglect to do so much as read the relevant

    empirical literature, we are in danger of passing on false claims year-after-year or century-after-

    century.

    Perhaps philosophers believe their claims are metaphors illustrating a deeper, underlying,

    purely normative argument. If so, they should state it explicitly. Readers should not have the

    burden of constructing argument out of metaphor. At the very least, philosophers should be clear

    about whether a factual statements is unsupported because it is a metaphor, or because they

    believe it is an obvious truth. Yet, when the claim involves prehistory, philosophers have a

    surprising willingness to accept this kind of ambiguity, even though relying on a claim as an

    obvious truth is nearly the opposite of relying on it as a metaphor.

    The subject of this article has nothing to do with the fact-value distinction. Pure ethical

    theory does not require factual claims, but applied ethical theory always does. This article is

    directed at applied ethical theories and theories that are ambiguous about whether or not they are

    applied.

    This essay presents a through investigation of truth claims in the natural rights

    justification for private property based on unilateral appropriation (some version of which is

    involved in most arguments for strong private property rights). This theory is a good example of

    the undisciplined use of factual assertions about the Stone Age. Property rights advocates

    typically tell an appropriation story as if it were true, present little or no evidence that it is true,

    make no explicit claim that it is a metaphor, and seldom state an underlying a priori argument

    capable of replacing the metaphor. Philosophers have extensively explored the normative

    difference between natural property rights theory and competing theories, but they have paid

    little attention to the factual claims embedded in the appropriation story. Are they necessary to

    support property rights advocates conclusions? If so, are they true?

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    Part One demonstrates that appropriation-based property rights theory is an applied

    theory. This demonstration is necessary because many property rights advocates have been

    unclear about the extent to which they rely on empirical claims, even though many of them

    explicitly draw on factual premises at important points. Part Two examines these claims

    against evidence from anthropology and archeology. It finds that they are certainly

    unsubstantiated and possibly refuted. Part Three discusses the implications of the argument.

    Part One

    Property rights advocates are well aware that their theories rely on empirical facts.

    Nozick writes, Justice in holdings is historical; it depends on what actually has happened.2

    Loren Lomasky writes, What is in fact the casecarries moral weight.3Rothbard writes, We

    can only find the answer [to who owns property] through investigating the concrete data of the

    particular case, i.e. through historical inquiry.4Yet, the works of these authors contain little

    historical inquiry. They seem to believe that, although historical investigation might be necessary

    to show that any particular persons claim to any particular piece of property is justified, no such

    investigation is necessary to prove their general conclusion. That is, private property rights

    extend over all or most resources; those rights imply strong (possibly overriding) moral limits on

    governments powers of taxation, regulation, and redistribution.5

    In Nozicks version of the natural rights argument, justice in holdings is determined

    entirely by the repeated application of three principles: original acquisition (appropriation),

    voluntary transfer, and rectification. The second and third principles are fairly straightforward.

    Most of the attention in the debate of natural rights theory focuses on appropriation.

    Although there are many different versions of appropriation theory, basic elements of it

    are common to all and well known. The first person to do X with a resource appropriates it

    unilaterally.6That is, she establishes ownership without the need for the consent of anyone else.

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    This X can be discovery, first use, first occupancy, first claim, first labor, and so on. Israel

    Kirzner endorses discovery. Lomasky and Jan Narveson both endorse something like first use or

    first occupancy.7 Probably the greater number property rights advocates, including Rothbard,

    Boaz, and (tentatively) Nozick, follow John Locke in endorsing first labor: particularly the

    transformation of the resource through labor.

    If labor is the criteria, a hunter appropriates her kill but not the land on which she hunted

    because she transforms only the kill. A farmer, on the other hand, appropriates both the crops she

    planted and the land that she cleared, because she transforms both. Discovery, use, occupancy,

    and claim would seem to bestow ownership on hunter-gatherers, although most property rights

    advocates seem unwilling embrace that possibility.

    The lack of connection between current titleholders and original appropriators is the only

    empirical issue that is received significant attention in the debate over property rights theory, but

    critics and supporters alike agree that the vast majority of modern property rights cannot be

    traced by a series of just steps to original appropriation. This problem is not necessarily fatal.

    Again, most property rights advocates are open to the idea that many current property titles

    might be unjust. Their main concern is to justify the general pattern in which someonesprivate

    property rights place extensive moral limits on government. Still in a world in which the true

    heirs of the original appropriators cannot be found, we need some basis on which to say X owns

    this and Y does not. I have elsewhere argued that property rights advocates solve this problem

    (tacitly or explicitly) by invoking a fourth principle I call the statute of limitations, which can

    take the form of a time limit on rectification of past wrongs, adverse possession, abandonment

    and re-appropriation, or relative title.8

    The statute of limitations cannot free property rights advocates from the need for

    empirical investigation of prehistoric appropriation, because it frees current holderswhoever

    they arefrom the need to make a connection to original appropriation. Governments have held

    sovereignty for a long time, and most property rights advocates admit that sovereignty is

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    essentially the assertion of landownership. Nozick imagines a small utopian community that

    exists on jointly held land. The community will be entitled then, as a body, to determine what

    regulations are to be obeyed on its land; whereas the citizens of a nation do not jointly own its

    land and so cannot in this way regulate its use. Lomasky writes, [S]uppose that title to all

    property was conferred to one person, the king, and no one else owned anything. It would follow

    that should anyone make use of any item except with the sufferance of the king that person

    would be guilty of interference. Rothbard writes, If the State may be said to properly own its

    territory, then it is proper for it to make rules for anyone who presumes to live in that area.

    Thus, all three recognize the conceptual possibility of what I will call a property-owning

    government (a state that owns full or partial interest in its territory). They need to show that the

    state cannot or does not have just ownership of its territory. Property rights advocates cannot

    simply rule out a property-owning government on the grounds of its inability to show an

    unbroken chain of just transfers to original appropriation, because private property holders have

    the same inability. Unless property rights advocates can come up with a reason to apply the

    statute of limitations selectively, it protects a property-owning government as well as any other

    property owner.9

    I have argued elsewhere that natural rights theory cannot rule out a property-owning

    government on a priori grounds. Arguments based on negative freedom, self-ownership, the

    Lockean proviso, the need for consent, the supposed inherent criminality of government, and

    so forth fail to drive a wedge between the ownership of resources by government and the

    ownership of resources by any other corporate entity.10

    Therefore, property rights advocates have

    to rely on empirical claims how appropriation and subsequent trade actually occurred.

    Nozick uses what he calls, hypothetical history. He argues that if the hypothetical just

    history is close to the actual history, the structure it produces will be as just as one can expect

    to get. But if hypothetical history involved in producing the structure that now exists necessarily

    involves either rights violations or implausible assumptions about what people have consented

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    to, that structure must be ruled unjust. He tells one hypothetical history in which private property

    arises justly, one in which a minimal state arises justly out of a protective association, and two in

    which a more-than-minimal state arises unjustly or with implausible assumption.

    The three hypothetical histories involving government all begin with individual private

    property rights in place. Unsurprisingly, powerful governments violate those property rights. The

    other hypothetical history is the standard Lockean appropriation story in which individuals in a

    state of nature go into an unclaimed wilderness, clear the land, and establish private property

    rights. The operative premise in these hypothetical histories is that individual private property

    precedes collective property: resources are unowned when private individuals come along but

    they are individually owned when collectives come along. That is an empirical assertion about

    events that took place in prehistory.

    Nozick challenges people who believe in any other form of property to provide a theory

    of how such property rights arise. Once of frees oneself from Nozicks Stone Age presumption,

    this challenge is not difficult:

    (1) A hunter-gatherer band discovers, uses, occupies, and claims land. Later, they jointly

    begin to farm that land and hold it jointly. Anyone who does not want to participate in that

    project under those rules may go off into the wilderness alone or with whomever they choose.

    Therefore, everyone who remains agrees to these terms as much as anyone agrees to a market

    transaction. Eventually this group parcels out land to individuals with the understanding that it is

    subject to taxation, regulation, and redistribution by the collective. (2) An individual, Lockean

    appropriator chooses not to join any protective association. She protects her estate herself. She

    enlarges it through strategic marriage alliance, primogeniture, and rectification in defensive wars

    until one day her estate is the size of England and he calls herself the Queen. In both (1) and

    (2), a more-than-minimal government comes into existence without violating the principles of

    appropriation, voluntary transfer, or rectification.11

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    Nozicks only available response to these examples is that his hypothetical just history is

    close[r] to the actual history. Yet, Nozick presents no evidence about how original

    appropriation actually happened. His justification for such strong, individual private property

    rights, therefore, rests entirely on uninvestigated assumptions about events that occurred in the

    Stone Age. Nozick distracts attention from this assumption and focuses it on his moral theory,

    but his moral theory says only that people should respect each others ownership rights. It says

    nothing about whether rent-collecting landlords or tax-collecting governments have a better

    empirical claim to ownership. Without empirical evidence, Nozick has given us no reason at all

    to accept his conclusions about limited government.

    Nozick is not they only property rights advocate who distracts attention from the extent to

    which his conclusions rely on empirical assumptions. David Boaz endorses Nozicks entitlement

    theory without discussing its empirical base.12

    Tibor Machan phrases like the natural right to

    private property, but in four works on the issue, he does not spell out how a natural resource

    becomes private property, and thus, his theory does not indicate whether private title holders or

    governments have a better claim to hold that natural right.

    Jan Narveson is somewhat more explicit about his empirical claims. His original

    appropriators are pioneers. Such a person appropriated private property rights, because that

    was what the agent saw herself to be in the way of enabling herself to do. He claims, When

    the first Asian crossed the land bridge to Alaska did she then get title to the whole of North

    America? Certainly not. it cannot plausibly be argued that her activity, what she saw herself

    to be doing, was using a whole continent or anything like it.13

    Yet he refers to no evidence to

    show that the original appropriators actually saw themselves to be establishing individual rather

    than collective land rights. We are to take it on faith that the ancient Olmecs saw themselves as

    right-libertarian pioneers? Certainly this claim needs investigation.

    Israel Kirzner stresses present rather than past discovery as the justification for

    ownership. This would seem to take his theory out of the Stone Age, but he admits that the issue

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    of how the original inputs became property is of primordial importance. This forces him to

    make factual assertions about the origin of property: When I find an unowned natural object

    and, considering its annexation worthwhile, proceed to take physical possession of it, I have

    discovered it.14 Like Nozick, Kirzner establishes only that someone can take possession of

    natural resources.

    At least one property rights advocate, Loren Lomasky, recognizes that the standard

    appropriation-based justification of property relies on unsubstantiated empirical claims. He

    writes, A classically liberal theory of property rights holds that natural relations obtain between

    persons and objects in the world. These relations precede civil society and thereby establish

    claims to property that are prior to social determination.15

    He discusses empirical (as well as

    moral) weakness of that theory.16

    He attempts to reconstruct a rights-based theory of property

    without reference to prehistory. But he ends up falling back on similar empirical premises. He

    writes:

    If A comes to possess I, to use I in the service of his projects, and thereby values the

    having ofI, then A has appropriated I. A has reason to acknowledge and respect Bs

    having I*conditional upon B recognizing and respecting As special interest in I. A

    has reason to reject the imposition of a system of collective control over all goods that

    will determine whether A is entitled to haveI.17

    This conclusion works if A has appropriated I as an individual, but not if he has

    appropriatedIas part of a collective. Suppose A is a citizen, and I, which A comes to possess is

    the benefit he receives from government taxation, regulation, and redistribution within its

    territory. Suppose I* is the holding of a title to resources within the governments territory.

    Therefore, consider how Lomasky would have to revise the above statement:

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    If A comes to possess I(shared ownership of government-held territory), to useIin the

    service of his projects, and thereby values the having of it, then A has appropriated I.A

    only has a reason to acknowledge and respect Bs having I* (a property title) conditional

    upon B recognizing and respecting As special interest in the taxation, regulation, and

    redistribution of property titles. Therefore, A has reason to reject the imposition of a

    system of privatizedcontrol over all goods that will determine whether A is entitled to

    haveshared ownership of government-held territory (I).

    IfIcan be a share in the land held by a marriage, a partnership, or a corporation, why not

    a share in the land held by a corporate entity called a government? As far as I can tell,

    Lomaskys answer to that question is:

    [P]ersons come to civil society with things that are theirs. A socially defined system of

    property rights must be responsive to what persons have. In no respect does a civil order

    entail the collectivization of property.18

    On an a priori basis, natural rights theory can say people come to civil society with only one

    thingself-ownership. Whether they come with other anything else is an empirical claim, and

    all property rights advocates agree that at least many people come into civil society without

    private property rights in land. Consider how Lomasky would have to revise this statement to

    free it from this empirical content:

    Persons might come to civil society with things that are theirs. A socially defined system

    of property rights must be responsive to what persons might or might not have. In no

    respect does a civil order entail either the collectivization of private property or the

    privatization of public property.

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    In other words, devoid of its empirical content, Lomaskys argument says nothing about whether

    governments should have the power of taxation, regulation, and redistribution.

    Lomaskys empirical claim, [P]ersons come to civil society with things that are theirs,

    is very much the same as that classically liberal premise he was trying to distance himself

    from, property rights precede civil society. He makes no attempt to verify it; hes voiced a

    great deal of skepticism about it. Yet, he explicitly employs it as a necessary premise in his

    argument for limiting government.

    Murray Rothbard unambiguously rests his conclusions on the empirical content of his

    appropriation story. His original appropriator is a homesteader or pioneer, who clears and

    uses previously unused virgin land and brings it into this private ownership.19

    Recognizing the

    conceptual possibility of government ownership of its territory, he writes, our homesteading

    theory suffices to demolish any such pretensions by the State apparatus.20

    He doesnt explain

    precisely how a hypothetical story can demolish anyones ownership claims, but he later on

    writes, There is really only one reason for libertarians to oppose the formation of governmental

    property or to call for its divestment: the realization that the rulers of government are unjust and

    criminal owners of such property.21

    That is, if they came to ownership unjustly.

    Rothbard clearly believes the only way a collective could obtain ownership of land is by

    usurping that right from individual owners. We can tell he recognizes the importance of this

    empirical premise because his examples of abusive governments begin with a story of

    government aggressively seizing land from private individual property holders.22

    He seems to think this claim is obviously true. He refers to empirical support for other

    claims, such as that property law can exist in the absence of state sovereignty,23

    but he seems to

    think his claim to know what the original appropriators were thinking is so obvious that it needs

    no empirical support. However, one source that Rothbard cites for something else does contain

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    support this claim. The source is not empirical work, but a right-libertarian treatise by F. A.

    Hayek. He writes:

    [T]he erroneous idea that property had at some late stage been 'invented' and that before

    that there had existed an early state of primitive communism has been completely

    refuted by anthropological research. There can be no question now that the recognition of

    property preceded the rise of even the most primitive cultures . [I]t is as well

    demonstrated a scientific truth as any we have attained in this field.24

    Hayek cites three sources to support this claim. I have been able to find two of them. The first of

    these, although written by an anthropologist, Bronislaw Malinowski, is not a piece of empirical

    research but yet another right-libertarian treatise. The passage Hayek quotes uses a priori

    reasoning to argue that people must have property but it does not refer specifically to any

    empirical evidence to confirm. Hayeks second source, A. I. Hallowell, writes that property

    rights of some kind are universal, but not that individual private property rights are universal.

    He refers some of Malinowskis empirical research, writing Malinowskis conclusion was that,

    ownership, therefore, can be defined neither by such words as communism, nor

    individualism, nor by reference to joint-stock company systems or personal enterprise.

    This conclusion is not nearly as strong as Hayek implies.

    In all of the property rights literature cited here, these three citations are the only

    empirical support offered for the claim that individual private property rights precede civil

    society. It cannot bear the weight that has been place on it. If there is a property rights advocate

    who has conducted a more thorough investigation, he or she isnt cited by any of the authors

    mentioned here. We need a more thorough investigation to find out whether this claim is in fact a

    well demonstrated a scientific truth.

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    Part Two surveys anthropological and archeological literature to find evidence for this

    classically liberal hypothesis that these relations precede civil society. Who were the first

    private property holders? Who were the first collective property holders? Do private land claims

    tend to precede collective claims? Do individuals, acting as individuals, perform the first

    appropriative acts or is there evidence of collective or government appropriation?

    Part Two

    If we want to know how property developed, we have to look at the best available

    evidence. Most of the events were interested inthe first use of resources, the development of

    state powers, and the development of something recognizable as private propertyoccurred in

    prehistoric societies. That is, societies that do not keep written records. They are also called

    preliterate or non-literate societies. Anthropologists find evidence about prehistoric societies

    from the distant past by comparing three sources: direct archeological investigation of long

    passed societies, historical accounts of early contact between non-literate and literate people, and

    ethnographic investigation of contemporary non-literate societies.

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    To the extent that we are interested in people who lived thousands of years ago, the use of

    people living in non-literate societies today is inherently problematic. Economically simple

    modern societies are separated from our distant ancestors by as many generations as we are, and

    those who managed to maintain an economically simple lifestyle into modern times might only

    have done so because they occupied marginal land.26

    They might have been affected by years (or

    centuries) of contact with more complex societies.27

    Anthropologists try to get a picture of life in

    the distant past by triangulating these different kinds of data. If ethnographic investigation find

    that people with similar technology in many different parts of the world today share certain

    elements of social organization, and if archeological and historical investigations indicates that

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    people in the distant pasted shared some of those elements, we can begin to get some idea how

    people lived in the distant past. At least, that is the best method available at this time.

    This article traces the development of property through four different forms of social

    organization: bands, autonomous villages, chiefdoms, and states (each of which is defined in its

    own section below). These four forms of organization were first defined by Elman Service as

    stages in social evolution.28

    Few anthropologists today view them as part of a uni-linear

    progression. They are not intended as homogenous, discrete, non-overlapping categories but as

    reference points on a rough continuum from economically simple to more economically complex

    societies.29

    Anthropologists use these categories to further our understanding of history and

    prehistory by developing a picture of the regularity and variability within and between each

    form. These categories are not the only legitimate way to classify societies, but they do capture

    important differences in social organization that ethnologists have observed in diverse

    communities around the word and that archeologists and historians have found evidence of in the

    past.

    We cannot say that every complex modern society passed through all four of these forms

    of social organization, but we can be fairly confident that the earliest states developed out of

    chiefdoms; the earliest chiefdoms developed out of autonomous villages; and the earliest

    autonomous villages developed out of hunter-gatherer bands.30

    Therefore, understanding these

    reference points will give us some idea of how property and government developed.

    A. Hunter-gatherer bands

    Early humans, like other primates, lived in small foraging groups. Aside from intellectual

    ability, cooperation is the most significant difference between human foragers and other primate

    foragers.31

    Other primates forage almost entirely for themselves and for their infants,32

    while

    humans usually forage in groups and share what they have.33

    Morton Fried argues that the

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    institution of sharing accounts for the human success that has dominated Earths history over the

    last 2 million years.34

    Human-style, cooperative, hunter-gatherer bands probably developed sometime in the

    long interval between the branching off of humans from other apes (about 2 million years ago)

    and the appearance of biologically modern humans (at least the last 60,000 years ago and

    arguably more than 125,000 years ago). The hunter-gatherer band was probably the only form of

    social organization until about 15,000 or 20,000 years ago, and the most common form until only

    a few thousand years ago. The last remaining fulltime hunter-gathers are probably giving up the

    lifestyle in this generation, although some groups might continue to survive on more-than-half-

    time foraging into the future.35

    Most known hunter-gatherer bands had about 15 to 50 people including children and

    elderly.36

    They had fluid membership; larger bands could split into smaller bands, and

    individuals could leave one band to join a related band nearby.37

    Bands are usually nomadic

    within a fairly defined range.38

    Many farmers spend some of their time foraging, but the common

    definition of a hunter-gatherer band is a nomadic group, whose only productive activities are

    forms of foraging: hunting, gathering, and fishing.39

    The proposed criteria for appropriation (discovery, use, labor, etc.) all literally imply that

    property is far older than humanity. Most primates live in foraging groups with well-defined

    territories. In fact, they tend to define and defend their territories tend much more rigidly than

    human hunter-gatherers.40

    Beavers, bees, and ants transform the land with their labor. If we

    didnt make some qualification to appropriation theory, we would have a duty to respect a great

    deal of animal property rights. Yet, I know of no property rights advocates who are willing to do

    so. Perhaps it goes without saying that appropriation requires sentience. But if so, property does

    not begin with a person performing an appropriative act on a previously unused resource. The

    first truly sentient human must have lived in a foraging group that already had a delineated

    foraging territory. It is very unlikely that this person would alsohave claimed new territory for

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    her band. Perhaps then, property begins with an act of inheritance rather than an act of

    appropriation.

    If first claim, first use, or first occupancy by a sentient being establishes ownership, our

    hunter-gatherer ancestors appropriated most of world except for Antarctica, some remote islands,

    mountain tops, deserts, and so on. What sort of property rights did they establish?

    Many diverse anthropological studies show that the economically simplest human

    societiesthose with lifestyles most similar to the lifestyles of original appropriatorsdid not

    choose to establish anything like individual private property in land. Lee and Daly write, one

    characteristic common to almost all band societies (and hundreds of village-based societies as

    well) is a land tenure system based on a common property regime. These regimes were, until

    recently, far more common world-wide than regimes based on private property.41

    Martin Baily

    examined anthropological observations of more than fifty hunter-gatherer bands and autonomous

    villages, and found that they allhad collective claims to territory.42

    Some hunter-gatherers, such

    as the Mbuti Pygmies of central Africa and the Nayaka of southern India, view land not an

    object that can be owned but something that people can be closely associated with and related

    to.43

    The Inuit of arctic North American and the Hadza of east Africa have no exclusive

    territoriality at all. Woodburn writes The Eastern Hadza assert no rights over land and its

    ungarnered resources. they do not even seek to restrict the use of the land they occupy to

    members of their own tribe.44

    Among both human and non-human foraging primates, no

    individual can claim exclusive use of any piece land, and no individual can be excluded from

    resources she needs to maintain her existence.45

    Human foragers have something more like private property rights in food and tools, but

    those rights are seldom exclusive and not usually appropriated by individualistic labor mixing.46

    Hunter-gatherers have a strong obligation to share what they have (including things that they

    have made and big game they have killed) and little reciprocal obligation to produce.47

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    According to Hill and Hurtado, Property was never really private, and sharing was the most

    important aspect of the behavioral code.48

    According to Kristen Hawkes,

    Among modern tropical foragers, hunters generally do not control the distribution of

    meat from big animals. Large carcasses are treated more as a communal resource, like a

    public good from which many claim shares. A hunter cannot exclude other claimants,

    nor can he exchange portions of meat with other hunters (or anyone else) for obligations

    to return meat (or anything else).49

    Fried writes, in a simple egalitarian society the taking of something before it is offered is more

    akin to rudeness than stealing.50

    A property rights advocate might be tempted to argue that this evidence, rather than

    disproving the individual appropriation hypothesis, merely shows how quickly collectives

    violated individual property rights. Perhaps the collectives treatment of big game as common

    property is an example of early collectivist aggression against individual private property rights.

    This argument is not merely wishful thinking unsupported by evidence; it is substantially

    contradicted by evidence. Most hunter-gatherers prefer to hunt for big game, even though big

    game is treated as common property of the band regardless of who kills it.51

    Social approval,

    prestige, and competition for wives seem to be adequate incentives to get males to hunt for the

    whole band.52

    More importantly, individual hunter-gatherers could have created the institution of

    private property if they wanted to. All hunter-gatherers are free to leave the band and to start

    their own band with whoever wants to join. If 6 to 10 adult hunter-gatherers wanted to start a

    band that recognized the hunters natural right to exclusive ownership over the kill, no one would

    have interfered with them. Yet, although we know that hunter-gatherer bands split for many

    other reasons, we dont know of any who split for that reason. All known hunter-gatherers (in all

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    climates and geographies from the arctic to the tropics) exercised their free will to establish a

    collective property regime.53

    As the original appropriators, it was their right to do so.

    This evidence raises doubt about whether individual appropriation is a natural right. A

    natural right must be something that all humans want or need, something that all humans must

    respect in others to respect their humanity. But yet this natural right of individual appropriation

    was not see as natural at all until long after most land was already discovered, used, occupied,

    and claimed by groups of individuals who chose to hold that land and most of what it produced

    collectively. Individual private property was apparently not practiced by anyone for the first

    100,000 years of our existence as humans; it is not practiced by our closest primate relatives;54

    and there is no evidence that it was practiced by our hominid ancestors during the 2 million years

    separating humans from other primates. People in some parts of the world have never have

    practiced this institution in their history. This supposed natural right contravenes what some

    anthropologists have found to be a far more ancient principle: the belief that wild places could

    not be appropriated by any individual.55

    To say that individual appropriation is a natural rights is

    to say that all humans chose to live unnaturallyfor most of our existence as a species.

    Many property rights advocates deal with hunter-gatherer bands either by ignoring them

    entirely or by employing an appropriation criteria, such as first labor, that supposedly excludes

    bands territorial claims. This strategy has two difficulties.

    First, to say that hunter-gatherers do not transform their land through labor is another

    factual assertion that requires empirical investigation. Just because hunter-gatherers dont farm

    does not mean that they leave the land just as they found it. Earth was very different in 10,000

    BCE, after hunter-gatherers covered it, than it was in 500,000 BCE, when hominid foragers were

    confined to a small part of Africa. For example, some researches believe that hunter-gatherers

    hunted many large animal species to extinction.56

    This may have been unwise, but it must count

    as a serious transformation of the land, more so than clearing the land of trees, which can easily

    grow back.

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    Second, excluding hunter-gatherers from land appropriation implies that whatever they

    do with land is not enough to obtain the right to keep doing it. Even though they obtain the right

    to the meat or fruit they collect, no matter how long they have been foraging, they do not obtain

    the right to go on foraging without interference.57 The appeal of individual private property

    rights supposedly relies on the appeal of freedom from interference. If you are the first one to use

    a resource, no one can stop you from what youre doing; no one can judge you or impose their

    way of life on you. The endorsement of the farmer and the miners right to aggressively interfere

    with hunter-gatherers runs completely contrary to that appeal. If that endorsement were an

    aberration, the appeal of the theory can be restored by disavowing it. But it appears that counting

    hunter-gatherers as owners of land implies that the original property rights to most of the land on

    Earth were collective property rights. To maintain the belief that property is necessarily

    individual and private, property rights advocates either have to come up with some story why

    land, initially appropriated by collectives, must necessarily get into the hands of individuals, or

    they have to accept that the endorsement of the aggressive dispossession of hunter-gatherers is a

    fundamentalpart of their theory.

    Whichever argumentative strategy property rights advocates might take, we have look to

    the development of economically more complex societies to see whether the theory actually

    leads to an individual property rights regime.

    B. Autonomous villages

    The simplest known settled communities are villages with populations of 100 to 600

    people.58

    Most anthropologists call these kinds of communities tribal societies, but some prefer

    the term autonomous villages. I use the latter term both because it is more descriptive and

    because, the word tribe is commonly used many different ways.

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    Many autonomous villages survived into the Twentieth Century, and ethnographers have

    extensively studied them. A few people continue this lifestyle today.59

    Autonomous villages tend

    to have a nominal headman with no real power, little economic inequality, and no explicit fixed

    rules.60 In all known autonomous villages, there is virtually no trade or specialization. 61 All

    individuals, (including headmen & religious leaders) produce their immediate familys

    consumption.62

    There are usually no fixed property rights in land; all members of the village are

    entitled to access to land, but not necessarily a particular plot.63

    Like bands, autonomous villages

    have fluid membership. Although they have the technological capacity to support a population in

    the thousands, they are prone to split when their populations increase to more than a few

    hundred, and autonomous villages with populations of more than 600 are rarely if ever

    observed.64

    Autonomous villages were first societies to assert land rights stronger than simply

    territoriality and to engage in farming. However, they did not do it in that order.65

    The oldest

    known autonomous villages appeared about 15,000 years ago, in areas where foraging was

    sufficiently abundant to support settled people. The oldest known agricultural villages appeared

    only 8,000 or 10,000 years ago.66

    Many of the oldest know agricultural sites were built on sites

    that had already been occupied by settled hunter-gatherers. It is easy to imagine why: settled

    hunter-gatherers have much greater ability to experiment with agriculture than nomadic hunter-

    gatherers do.

    Therefore, agriculture follows rather than coincides with a major change in the

    institutions of property ownership. This sequence has important implications. Remember that

    this natural rights theory is supposed to be based on a sober and realistic understanding of human

    nature, of who we are, of what we actually do, and of the rights we actually need. Property rights

    advocates assume that when people transform the land with their labor by becoming farmers,

    they naturally require a greater right to that land than they required when they merely hunter-

    gatherers. Agriculture must, therefore, coincide with a great change in the kind of rights people

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    want hold in land. But apparently this change in property rights was not something that the first

    agriculturalists thought they needed. They continued the same property rights regime as their

    settled hunter-gatherer ancestors.

    Also, the property rights regime that these original appropriators chose to establish was

    not the individualist system that property rights advocates suppose. Individuals in known

    autonomous villagers are interested in use-rights in land, not individual land ownership.67

    The

    most important of these rights is that each member of the community maintains direct and

    independent access to land and other resources with which they can secure their needs, but an

    individual claim to be the owner of any particular plot of land does not seem to have been

    important.68

    Autonomous village land rights have been described as ambiguous and flexible69

    or overlapping and complex.70

    Fried observes, in most rank societies, the concept of title, of

    legally specific ownership, is absent. A population, with its ranked head, is associated with area,

    but they have little power to keep out newcomers.71

    There is, however, usually individual

    excludability in crops; each family would keep what they produced.72

    The ambiguity and complexity of property rights in simple agrarian societies is probably

    the source of Hayeks overstatement about the existence of property right. In most cases, we can

    say that kinships groups owned the village because they hold rights to that land against other

    kinship groups. But the kinship groups held the land collectively. Individuals could not alienate

    their share of ownership in the village and they clan couldnt deny them direct access to land.

    Hayeks source, Malinowski, studied tribes with clan-based ownership, not the kind of

    individualistic private property postulated in the appropriation story.73

    A headman was sometimes spoken of as the owner of his groups real estate, but he

    acted more like the administrator of his groups possessions.74

    Either way, the headman present a

    difficulty for property rights advocates. If he was the owner, the original appropriator was also

    the government of the village. If he was not the owner, the original appropriator was the village

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    collective. Neither one implies that the original appropriator was an individual private property

    holder.

    Once again, a property rights advocates might be tempted to interpret this situation as an

    example of original individual appropriators being victims of group interference. But once again,

    such an interpretation is contradicted by evidence. Autonomous villages habitually under-used

    resources and were therefore able to settle disputes by splitting.75

    As in band societies,

    individuals were free to leave and set up a society with a private property regime. Although

    thousands of village societies are known to anthropology, there does not seem to be any

    ethnographic, archeological, or historic study showing evidence that any village created the

    institution of individual private land ownership or that villagers desired to do so. The reasonable

    conclusion is that the first farmers voluntarily chose to hold land collectively. As the full owners

    under appropriation theory, they were, of course, within their moral authority to do so.

    Once again, this observation has great importance for property rights theory. Supposedly,

    what we really care about are the normative principles underlying appropriation theory. These

    principles lead us to respected individual private property only becausesupposedlythe first

    people to mix their labor with the land created individual private property. Instead, we find even

    using this criteria, the original appropriators established something very different than individual

    private property. Why did the earliest agriculturalists tend to be collectivists? Baily argues that

    land simply isnt very valuable to the earliest farmers with the simplest techniques; they would

    clear it, farm it for a few years and move on. What they needed at any given moment was access

    to some land, not permanent exclusive control over any piece particular piece of land. Individual

    ownership of land comes when it makes sense economically, often with fertilization or

    irrigation.76

    This observation provides a possible way out for property rights advocates. They might

    argue that fixed property comes later than Locke supposed; not with first transformative labor-

    mixing, but with more sophisticated techniques, when land is transformed so much that

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    exclusivity becomes more appealing. Another possible way out for property rights advocates

    would be to suppose that even though the original appropriators held lands as clans, their

    property rights were eventually transferred into the hands of private individuals. To examine

    these possibilities we have to look further ahead in prehistory.

    C. Chiefdoms

    A chiefdom is something like proto-state, consisting of at least several villages brought

    under a single rule. They tend to have populations in the low thousands to tens of thousands.77

    The first chiefdoms probably came into existence within the last 10,000 years. Many chiefdoms

    survived into the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, and a few are still not fully incorporated

    into nation-states today. Chiefdoms can support some economic specialization. Archaeological

    evidence shows that the oldest known chiefdoms had the earliest signs of socio-economic

    differentiation.78

    They were the earliest and simplest know forms of social organization in which

    some individuals were excluded from direct access to the resources to sustain life. They were the

    first to have a permanent specialist rulers who did not produce their own food.79

    Chiefdoms

    sometimes maintained large joint projects such as irrigation, flood control, temple or monument

    building.80

    The chief and the elite group can have varying levels of authority depending on the size

    and complexity of the chiefdom. Some chiefdoms, usually smallest ones, were only slightly less

    egalitarian than tribal societies.81

    Others were extremely inegalitarian with powerful rulers, rigid

    class distinction, and sometimes slavery.82

    In larger Polynesian island groups, chiefs commanded

    powers of life and death over their subjects.83

    Chiefdoms are the simplest and presumably earliest form of social organization with

    excludability in property and persons who can be clearly identified as individual owners. Yet,

    these original private property holders do not fit the model supposed by property rights

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    advocates. The property owners were the chiefs, who both owners andgovernors.84

    Why were

    these powers combined? Probably because the economies were so simple: the separation of

    different areas of power (economic, religious, political, etc.) only seems to have become possible

    in more complex economies.85Timothy Earle writes, In all cases, economic power was in some

    sense basic to the political strategies to amass [political] power.86

    And, [T]he evolution of

    property rights by which chiefs control primary production can be seen as basic to the evolution

    of many complex stratified societies the significance of economic control through varying

    systems of land tenure is a constant theme.87

    Hawaii provides an excellent case study, because chiefdoms existed there without contact

    with more economically complex societies until the late 1700s, and good historical records were

    taken in the early years of contact. In an in-depth study of Hawaiian chiefdoms, Timothy Earle

    finds that chiefs were the only people in pre-contact Hawaii who could be spoken of as owners:

    of colonizing canoes, of landholding descent groups, of irrigation projects, of the irrigated land,

    of particularly productive land.88

    They did the things a Lockean appropriator is supposed to do.

    [T]he environment was transformed into a cultural world owned by a class of ruling chiefs.89

    Chiefs financed the construction of irrigation canals, and thereby appropriated the most

    productive lands. They acted as managers of irrigation projects. And they apparently financed

    and led the expeditions that originally brought people to the islands in about 600CE.90

    Earle also

    finds evidence of various forms of ownership-based chiefly power in other times and places such

    as pre-Columbian South America, Iron-Age Denmark, Olmec Mexico, the pre-Columbian

    Mississippi basin, Bronze-Age Britain, and pre-Roman Spain.91

    Once established as owner-governors, Hawaiian paramount chiefs treated their chiefdoms

    as for-profit businesses. They hired and fired community chiefs, who hired and fired konohiki

    (local managers), who allocated lands to commoners in exchange for labor.92

    The konohiki also

    had the power rescind land for nonpayment of labor.93

    Earle writes:

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    In chiefdoms, control over production and exchange of subsistence and wealth creates the

    basis for political power. In Hawaii, community chiefs allocated to commoners their

    subsistence plots in the chiefs irrigated farmlands in return for corve work on chiefly

    lands and special projects. By owning the irrigation systems, and thus controlling access

    to the preferred means of subsistence, chiefs directed a commoners labor. Where you

    lived was determined by whose land manager put you to work.94

    Property rights advocates could argue that the first chiefs were probably took power by

    violent aggression. This is undoubtedly true for chiefdoms that developed out of autonomous

    villages. It might not be true for chiefdoms that were founded by colonizing expeditions to

    uninhabited islands. I presume the aggressive possibility is far more common. However,

    establishing that the earliest chiefs were usurpers would be far from sufficient to support the

    conclusions property rights advocates wish us to draw. The question is not whether chiefs

    usurped power, but from whom they usurped it. Property rights advocates ask us to assume that

    governments must have usurped power from individual property holders.

    But there is no evidence of that such people existed. We know chiefs did not take power

    from any ownership class because no ownership class predated chiefdoms. Chiefs arethe earliest

    known people to hold exclusive individual property rights. They only preexisting entities that

    chiefs could have usurped power fromautonomous villages and hunter-gatherer bandsdid

    not practice the institution of individual private property in land.

    The closest thing to small private holders in Hawaiian chiefdoms were the konohiki, who

    were appointed by the chief to serve his interest. Thus the relationship between government and

    small holders in these actually existing early governments was the opposite of the relationship

    Nozick supposes in his imagined early governments. Instead of small holders with an

    appropriation-based claim to property appointing a government to serve the small holders

    interests, we see a government (with a possible appropriation-based claim to property)

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    appointing small holders to serve its interests. The only connection that the konohiki have to

    original appropriation is through the government. The konohikis claim to have the right to

    manage the land they control is because the ultimate landlord, the paramount chief, chose them

    rather than someone else. Even if the chiefs ancestors illegitimately usurped power from

    someone, giving the chiefs ownership rights to his appointees would do nothing to rectify that

    wrong.

    None of the potential claimants to be the original appropriator gives property rights

    advocates what they need. If chiefs are the original appropriators, natural rights theory implies

    monarchy. If autonomous villages or hunter-gatherer bands were the original appropriators,

    natural rights theory implies that we should return the land to the people as a group. Either way,

    instead of a limit on government power over its territory, appropriation theory provides a

    justification for it.

    If the institution of individual private property developed by strengthening the claims of

    people like the konohiki, the belief that government somehow interferes with private property

    holders with an appropriation-based claim to property is backwards. To find out where the

    institution of individual private property emerged, we need to examine the development of full

    states.

    D. Early states

    By 5,000 years ago some chiefdoms became so large and complex that they could be

    called states or empires. Some archeologists use the term early civilizations.95

    States differ

    from chiefdoms in size, level of economic specialization, and the power and stability of

    government. Although all early states were still primarily agricultural, they had complex

    economies with specialist warriors, administrators, rulers, and professionals. They were also the

    first to leave behind historical records.

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    All early states for which there is sufficient available information were extremely

    hierarchicalpolitically, economically, and socially.96

    They were ruled by kings with the aid of

    a small, powerful ruling group.The upper classes were no more than a few percent of the total

    population, but they controlled most the surplus wealth, lived luxurious lifestyles, made all

    decisions about policy and administration, and justified their position by claiming special

    supernatural origin.97

    Lower class agricultural laborers, who were generally barred from social

    mobility, made up the bulk of the population (probably well over 90 percent), and faced not even

    the pretence of equal protection of the laws.

    Bruce Trigger studied seven early civilizations across the world: the Aztecs, the Maya,

    Yoruba-Benin (of sub-Saharan Africa), the Inca, Egypt, Southern Mesopotamia, and the Shang

    (of China). He found that they all had kings who united religious, economic, and political

    power.98

    Even the highest-ranking commoners were most often state employees, such as scribes,

    soldiers, and administrators.99

    It appears that private property did not exist in the earliest states. A small upper class in

    each state controlled wealth and made policy decisions, but they were usually also government

    officials who received land as a revocable reward for government service.100

    In the Americas,

    institutional land assigned to individuals in return for service constituted a major source of

    revenue for the nobility, all of whose active male members were involved in some sort of state

    service.101

    In all early states for which adequate documentation exists, the legal system

    protected government property and upper-class privileges.102

    A defining feature of all early

    civilizations was the institutionalized appropriation by a small ruling group of most of the wealth

    produced by the lower classes. Farmers and artisans did not accumulate large amounts of

    wealth, although they created virtually all the wealth that existed in these societies.103

    In some

    cases local kin groups continued to hold land collectively. This practice is probably a holdover

    from earlier forms of social organization.104

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    Most experts in the development of early civilizations seem to agree that private

    property is a recent innovation, which did not exist in the earliest states.105

    Taxation developed

    simultaneously with the transfer of land from collective property to private property:106

    very

    much the opposite of the story property rights advocates tell in which collectives assert control

    over land that had previously held by individual private owners rather than collectives.

    Trigger argues that although private land cannot always be ruled out, there is no

    evidence that such land existed in most early civilizations.107

    He does in fact rule out private

    ownership in five of the seven early civilizations in his study (the Aztecs, the Maya, the Yoruba,

    the Inca, and the Shang): That leaves Mesopotamia and Egypt as early civilizations in which

    some land might have been privately owned.108

    In Mesopotamia, private land was a late

    development. Maisels finds that land in prehistoric and early-historic Mesopotamia was owned

    by temples, clans, or collectives.109

    Land was held collectively prior to 3000BCE, after which

    increasing amounts of land fell under the control of temples or palaces, but some of it appears to

    have become the property of individual creditors. It is less certain that private land existed in

    the Old Kingdom of Egypt.110

    Nevertheless, it goes too far to say that kings owned all the land

    in their territory. Kings often claimed ownership of all lands (perhaps a idea carried over from

    chiefdoms?), but in practice their actual hold over land was weaker than full ownership.111

    Something truly recognizable as an individual private title to land emerges only later and

    only in certain places such as Rome and medieval northern Europe. Chinese civilization, for

    example, never evolved a strong sense of private property,112

    except perhaps under the 21st

    Century communist regime. Some property rights advocates who portray private property as an

    ancient and ubiquitous institution appear to have been mislead by beginning their analysis in

    Greece and Rome.113

    Property in the earliest states looks much different, and it appears in a way seems to the

    hypothesis that the earliest private property holders were more like the konohiki than original

    appropriators who owe nothing to the state.

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    Once again, the findings of this investigation have important consequences for property

    rights theory. Supposedly government control over property can be established only by

    interfering with private landholders, but there is very little evidence to support this supposition.

    They certainly interfered with someone, but landholders tended to be the beneficiaries rather than

    victims of that interference. Any connection that private landholders have to the original

    appropriators seems to have come through the state, and it is, therefore, directly or indirectly

    dependent on the legitimacy of the states ownership of its territory.

    This problem for natural rights theory becomes more evident when we look at land rights

    that owe their origin to colonization. In many cases, governments have invaded taken land from

    bands, villages, and chiefdoms who do not practice private property so that privileged members

    of the state can hold that land as private property.114

    Someone in this story is the victim of

    government interference, but it is not the private property holders.

    Part Three

    Property rights advocates have been repeating the same appropriation story for more than

    300 years: Property begins when individual homesteaders plant the first crops thereby

    appropriating individual private property. Collective entities, such as governments, appear only

    later and obtain property only be interfering with individual private property holders. If the

    normative theory behind it is correct, and if this story is true, the private property rights place

    great moral limits on government.

    Unfortunately for property rights advocates, there is no reason to believe that this story is

    true, and very good reason to believe it is false. There is no evidence that the original

    appropriators were homesteaders who established individual private property rights. Hunter-

    gatherer bands and autonomous villages held land as groups. The first individuals to hold

    exclusive property rights were not private owners but chiefs who were both owners and

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    governors. It is very likely the first chiefs and monarchs usurped power, but there is no evidence

    that they usurped powerfromindividual private property holders; there is not even evidence that

    a class of private property holders preceded chiefs.

    Something recognizable as individual private property emerges only later, and the first

    holders appear to have received it as a reward for service to the king. If so, the rights that they

    have over that land are whatever rights the king chose to bestow on him. If the king chose to

    retain the powers to tax, regulate, and redistribute that property, so be it. If the kings claim to

    that property was illegitimate, an individuals claim stemming from their service to the king is

    also illegitimate.

    Property rights advocates have failed to prove their case. That property rights advocates

    have pass on false factual claims in the philosophy literature for so long should certainly be

    worrying.

    The available historical evidence does not give us reason to believe that private

    corporations or individuals have a stronger appropriation-based claim to hold the rights they hold

    than governments have to hold the rights they hold. I cannot say that it is impossible to make an

    argument separating government and private land rights without reference to spurious factual

    claims, but I can say that none of the property rights advocates cited in this article succeed in

    doing so. The government is just a landlord. If we trace the history of the its land claim we will

    not find an unbroken chain of just transfers to the original appropriation, but the same is true for

    any landlord.

    A property rights advocate could respond to this evidence by accepting that governments

    own most of the property in the world. Anarcho-capitalism exists; landownership just happens to

    be dominated by about 200 corporations called governments. I expect that few if any property

    rights advocates will have this reaction. Why would theorists so committed to accepting any

    pattern of distribution refuse to accept this one? Hayek and Nozick both accuse egalitarians of

    being motivated by envy,115

    but perhaps property rights advocates are motivated by another kind

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    of envy: the envy a lord has for his king. The lord forgets that the kings power over the land is

    of the same kind and same origin as the lords power. If the king is unjust his power must be

    returned to the people, not usurped again by jealous lords.

    Notes

    1I use the terms political philosophy and political theory interchangeably.2Nozick,Anarchy, State, and Utopia, p. 152.3CITE: 130, emphasis original.4Rothbard, The Ethics of Liberty, p. 51,5

    Property rights advocates disagree about how strong those limits are. Nozick wants a minimal state. Rothbardwants no state at all, but they share the belief that private property rights imply strong limits on what government

    can do.6CITE Attas characterizes appropriation in this way.7CITE: Lomasky; Narveson.8Self-citation; Epstein 1995. Simple Rules for a Complex World. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, pp. 64-

    67. Rothbard, The Ethics of Liberty, p. 63. Edward Feser, 'There is no Such Thing as an Unjust Initial Acquisition',

    Social Philosophy and Policy22 (2005): 56-80 argues that most past injustices simply arent rectifiable, p. 79.

    Nozick,Anarchy, State, and Utopia, includes several statements that appear to be tacit endorsements of the statute of

    limitations including, p. 158, p. 160 (ignoring acquisition and rectification), and pp. 230-231. CITE: Lomasky9Self-citation.10Self-citation.11Self-citation.12Boaz , pp. 65-74.13CITE: Narveson, pp. 83-86.14Kirzner , pp. 153-155.15CITE: Lomaksy, pp. 118-119.16CITE: Lomaksy, pp. 113-120.17CITE: Lomaksy, pp. 130-131.18CITE: Lomaksy, 131.19Rothbard The Ethics of Liberty. pp. 49, 56-58, 172, 183.20Rothbard The Ethics of Liberty. , pp. 48-49.21Rothbard The Ethics of Liberty. , 56.22For example, Let us say that Ruritania is ruled by a king who has grievously invaded the rights of persons and

    the legitimate property of individuals, p. 54; All that feudalism, in our sense, requires is the seizure by violence

    of landed property from its true owners, pp. 66-67.23Rothbard The Ethics of Liberty. , 178; 178n3; 178n424CITE: Hayek, Law, Legislation, and Liberty, p. 108.25Clark 1968. "Studies of Hunter-Gatherers as an Aid to the interpretation of Prehistoric Societies." In Lee and

    DeVore (ed.)Man the Hunter. New York: Aldine, 276-280.26Renfrew 2007.Prehistory: the making of the human mind. London: Phoenix, p. 141; Fried 1967. The Evolution of

    Political Society: An Essay in Political Anthropology. New York: Random House, p. 53-54; Lee 1968. "What

    Hunters Do for a Living, or, How to Make Out on Scarce Resources." In Lee and DeVore (ed.) Man the Hunter.

    New York: Aldine, 30-48, p. 43.27Lvi-Strauss 1968. "The Concept of the Primitive." In Lee and DeVore (ed.) Man the Hunter. New York: Aldine,

    349-352; Colchester 1984. Rethinking stone age economics: Some speculations concerning the pre-Columbian

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    Yanoama economy.Human Ecology 12: 3, 291-314; Lee and Daly 1999. "Foragers and Others." In Lee and Daly

    (ed.) The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Hunters and Gatherers. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1-19, p. 6.28CITE: Service29CITE:30I will not be dealing with nomadic herding societies, which are often classed as chiefdoms, although they dont fit

    neatly into any of these categories.31Washburn and Lancaster In (ed.), , pp. 301-303; Fried , pp. 106-107; Hawkes, O'Connell and Blurton Jones 2001.

    Hunting and Nuclear Families: Some Lessons from the Hadza about Men's Work. Current Anthropology 42: 5, 681-

    709.32Fried , p. 44.33Lee "Primitive Communism and the Origin of Social Inequality." In (ed.), p. 231; Lee The !Kung San: Men

    Women, and Work in a Foraging Society. 458-461; Bird-David 1990. The Giving Environment: Another Perspective

    on the Economic System of Gatherer-Hunters. Current Anthropology 31: 2, 189-196.34Fried , pp. 106-107.35Burch 1998. "The Future of Hunter-Gatherer Research." In Gowdy (ed.) Limited wants, unlimited means: A

    reader on hunter-gatherer economics and the environment. Washington, DC: Island Press, 201-17; Murdock 1968.

    "The Current Status of the World's Hunting and Gathering Peoples." In Lee and DeVore (ed.) Man the Hunter. New

    York: Aldine, 13-20; Roscoe 2002. The Hunters and Gatherers of New Guinea. Current Anthropology 43: 1, 153-

    162.36Fried , p. 113; Lee and Daly "Foragers and Others." In (ed.), , especially p. 3.37Turnbull 1968. "The Importance of Flux in Two Hunting Societies." In Lee and DeVore (ed.) Man the Hunter.

    New York: Adline, 132-137; Bird-David 1994. Sociality and Immediacy: or, past and present conversations on

    bands.Man 29: 3, 583-603; Boehm , pp. 72-73, 86-87; : Woodburn 1968. "Stability and Flexibility in Hadza

    Residential Groupings." In Lee and DeVore (ed.)Man the Hunter. New York: Aline, 103-110; Bird-David Sociality

    and Immediacy: or, past and present conversations on bands. ; Leacock 1998. "Women's Status in Egalitarian

    Society: Implications for Social Evolution." In Gowdy (ed.)Limited wants, unlimited means: A reader on hunter-

    gatherer economics and the environment. Washington, DC: Island Press, 139-164, pp. 142-143.38Bird-David Sociality and Immediacy: or, past and present conversations on bands. ; Turnbull In (ed.), , p. 135.39There are more liberal definitions, and as with anything, there is always difficulty drawing the line. Roscoe, .40Boehm . , p. 29.41Lee and Daly "Foragers and Others." In (ed.), , p. 4.42Baily, , p. 185.

    43Bird-David The Giving Environment: Another Perspective on the Economic System of Gatherer-Hunters. , pp.190-192.44Woodburn "An Introduction to Hadza Ecology." In (ed.), , p. 50; CITE: Hoebel, E. A. 1954. The Law of Primitive

    Man. Cambridge, MA, p. 59,45Lee "Primitive Communism and the Origin of Social Inequality." In (ed.), pp. 231-232; Lee The !Kung San: Men

    Women, and Work in a Foraging Society. , p. 456; Bird-David The Giving Environment: Another Perspective on the

    Economic System of Gatherer-Hunters. ; Fried , p. 58. See also Section 1.46Bird-David The Giving Environment: Another Perspective on the Economic System of Gatherer-Hunters. .47Some anthropologists find almost no evidence for reciprocity: Bird-David The Giving Environment: Another

    Perspective on the Economic System of Gatherer-Hunters. ; Bird-David Beyond the 'Original Affluent Society": A

    Culturalist Reformulation. ; Hawkes, O'Connell and Blurton Jones Hunting and Nuclear Families: Some Lessons

    from the Hadza about Men's Work. . Others find some such evidence: Gurven 2006. The Evolution of Contingent

    Cooperation. Current Anthropology 47: 1, . Fried , p. 62 f3.48

    Hill and HurtadoAche Life History: The Ecology and Demography of a Foraging People. , p. xii.49Hawkes 2001. "Is Meat the Hunter's Property? Big Game, Ownership, and Explanations of Hunting and Sharing."

    In Stanford and Bunn (ed.)Meat-Eating and Human Evolution. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 219-236.50Fried . , p. 75.51Hawkes "Is Meat the Hunter's Property? Big Game, Ownership, and Explanations of Hunting and Sharing." In

    (ed.), ; Leacock In (ed.), , p. 145; Hawkes, O'Connell and Blurton Jones Hunting and Nuclear Families: Some

    Lessons from the Hadza about Men's Work. .52Hawkes, O'Connell and Blurton Jones Hunting and Nuclear Families: Some Lessons from the Hadza about Men's

    Work. , p. 695.53Boehm , pp. 72-73.

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    54Hawkes "Is Meat the Hunter's Property? Big Game, Ownership, and Explanations of Hunting and Sharing." In

    (ed.),55Katz 1997. Private Property versus Markets: Democratic and Communitarian Critiques o Capitalism.American

    Political Science Review 91: 2, 277-289, p. 284.56 CITE: Blitzkreig.57

    See, Narveson 1998. Libertarianism vs. Marxism: Reflections on G. A. Cohen's Self-Ownership, Freedom andEquality. The Journal of Ethics 2: 1, , p. 14n.58Renfrew , p. 142; Boehm , pp. 3-4; Lee "Primitive Communism and the Origin of Social Inequality." In (ed.), , p.

    236; Wilson 1988. The Domestication of the Human Species. New Haven: Yale University Press, p. 3.59Roscoe, .60Fried; Boehm .61Fried , pp. 129-130.62Fried , pp. 129-132, 177.63Sahlins 1974. Stone Age Economics. London: Tavistock, pp. 93-94; Baily 1992. Approximate Optimality of

    Aboriginal Property Rights.Journal of Law and Economics 35, 183, p. 92.64Fried , p. 113.65Renfrew argues that the propensity to assign value to goods seems to have developed with sedentism, which

    preceded agriculture by thousands of years.66Renfrew , pp. 142-145, 161.67Herskovits 1965.Economic Anthropology: The Economic Life of Primitive Peoples. New York: W. W. Norton.68Sahlins Stone Age Economics. , p. 93.69EarleBronze Age Economics: The First Political Economies. , p. 326-327.70Sahlins Stone Age Economics. , pp. 92-93.71Fried , p. 177.72Baily, , pp. 191-192.73Hoebel, E. A. 1954. The Law of Primitive Man. Cambridge, MA.74Fried , p. 117.75Bandy, .76Baily, , pp. 191-195.77Earle 2002.Bronze Age Economics: The First Political Economies. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, pp. 15-16.78Thomas 1999. Understanding the Neolithic. London: Routledge, p. 229; Renfrew , pp. 152, 164, 173-176.79Fried , p. 186-190.

    80Earle 1997.How Chiefs Come to Power: The Political Economy in Prehistory. Stanford: University Press; Earle2000. Archaeology, Property, and Prehistory.Annual Review of Anthropology 29, 39-60; EarleBronze Age

    Economics: The First Political Economies. .81Boehm , p. 98; Trigger 1990. "Maintaining Economic Equality in Opposition to Complexity: An Iroquoian Case

    Study." In Upham (ed.) The Evolution of Political Systems: Sociopolitics in Small-Scale Sedentary Societies .

    Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 119-145.82Lee "Primitive Communism and the Origin of Social Inequality." In (ed.), , p. 239; Boehm , p. 255.83Bellwood 1987. The Polynesians. London: Thames and Hudson, pp. 31-33.84EarleHow Chiefs Come to Power: The Political Economy in Prehistory. ; EarleBronze Age Economics: The First

    Political Economies. .85EarleHow Chiefs Come to Power: The Political Economy in Prehistory. , pp. 210-211.86EarleHow Chiefs Come to Power: The Political Economy in Prehistory. , pp. 74-75.87EarleBronze Age Economics: The First Political Economies. , pp. 327-328.88

    EarleHow Chiefs Come to Power: The Political Economy in Prehistory. , pp. 43, 44, 72, 73; EarleBronze AgeEconomics: The First Political Economies. , pp. 61-62.89EarleHow Chiefs Come to Power: The Political Economy in Prehistory. , p. 45.90EarleHow Chiefs Come to Power: The Political Economy in Prehistory. , pp. 43, 68-72, 82.91EarleHow Chiefs Come to Power: The Political Economy in Prehistory. , pp. 94-95, 102; EarleBronze Age

    Economics: The First Political Economies. , pp. 61-62, 345; Earle Archaeology, Property, and Prehistory. .92EarleHow Chiefs Come to Power: The Political Economy in Prehistory. , p. 79.93EarleHow Chiefs Come to Power: The Political Economy in Prehistory. , pp. 82-83.94EarleHow Chiefs Come to Power: The Political Economy in Prehistory. , p. 7.95Trigger Understanding Early Civilizations: A Comparative Study. .

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    96Trigger Understanding Early Civilizations: A Comparative Study. , pp. 44-45. The Harappa of the Indus Valley

    may have been an exception, but there simple is not enough evidence to make a firm conclusion. Possehl, Raval and

    Chitalwala 1989.Harappan Civilization and Rojdi. Boston: Brill Archive.97Trigger Understanding Early Civilizations: A Comparative Study. , pp. 145-153.98Trigger Understanding Early Civilizations: A Comparative Study. , pp. 71, 79, 91.99

    Trigger Understanding Early Civilizations: A Comparative Study. , pp. 154-155.100Trigger Understanding Early Civilizations: A Comparative Study. , pp. 147, 153.101Trigger Understanding Early Civilizations: A Comparative Study. , p. 323.102Trigger Understanding Early Civilizations: A Comparative Study. , p. 265.103Trigger Understanding Early Civilizations: A Comparative Study. , p. 375.104Earle Archaeology, Property, and Prehistory. , p. 48.105See Trigger Understanding Early Civilizations: A Comparative Study. , p. 332; Fried , p. 201.106Earle Archaeology, Property, and Prehistory. , p. 48.107Trigger Understanding Early Civilizations: A Comparative Study. , p. 332.108Trigger Understanding Early Civilizations: A Comparative Study. , p. 332.109Maisels , p. 219.110Trigger Understanding Early Civilizations: A Comparative Study. , pp. 332-334.111Trigger Understanding Early Civilizations: A Comparative Study. , pp. 314-315; Earle Archaeology, Property,

    and Prehistory. , p. 47.112Trigger Understanding Early Civilizations: A Comparative Study. , p. 239.113CITE.114CITE.115CITE: Hayek, The Constitution of Liberty, p. 93; CITE: Nozick,Anarchy, State, and Utopia, p. 240.