Proudhon's most famous declaration that "property is theft" comes from
this, his most famous work, published in French in 1840; the English
translation dates from 1890. According to Proudhon, only that which is
being used is real property. Land must be lived on or farmed to be
property, and goods must have been made by one's own labor to be owned.
These new definitions challenge the very basis of capitalist systems,
and Proudhon used them as the foundation for his writings in support of
anarchy. Activists, historians, and philosophers will find themselves
pondering his arguments long after they have finished reading.
PIERRE-JOSEPH PROUDHON (1809-1865) was a French political philosopher
who wrote extensively on anarchy and was the first person known to have
referred to himself as an anarchist. His most famous writings include
The General Idea of the Revolution in the 19th Century (1852) and System
of Economic Contradictions; or The Philosophy of Poverty (1846).