The philosophical problem of property focuses on what can and cannot be owned, involving rigorous debates about legal ownership versus moral and cultural considerations.
Property can be defined through two lenses: property legalism, where ownership correlates with the law, and property relativism, where ownership is shaped by cultural acceptance.
A practical solution suggests that property is a convention—either formal laws or informal traditions that dictate ownership, reflecting broader moral theories.
The conventionalist approach to ownership settles disputes effectively by relying on established laws or cultural norms, steering clear of deeper philosophical debates.
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