The Subjects of the Law to Own Property the Pluralism of the Forms of Property

  • Franciszek Janusz Mazurek

Abstract

The author justifies that the right to own property is granted to various subjects: the individual and different bodies. He thinks that the right to own property is the demand of man’s inborn right. In view of that fact the human person is the subject of all communities which fulfil an auxiliary function. In order for these communities to fulfil their function they must in due measure have at their disposal private property. Finally, the author seeks justification for owning property by various communities in the natural right of the human person to own property. Owning property by these communities guarantees social and economic pluralism. Summing it up, the author states that the so-called principle of the general predestination of goods for all people of the human family is carried out through the pluralism of the forms of property.

Published
2020-05-07