Limina: A Journal of Historical and Cultural Studies

Biblical Commandment, Natural Property and Authority by Nicholas Blake

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Nicholas Blake
Australian National University: Canberra

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Biblical Commandment, Natural Property and Authority: a Quasi-Marxist Environmental Perspective

Biblical commandment includes the injunction for humanity to have dominion over the earth. And prima facie, it is far from clear whether the terms of this commandment are actually consistent with a more 'Green' view of natural dominion (e.g. such as that of stewardship).

This paper seeks to understand this apparent tension (and ultimately defend a stewardship view) in the light of (Marxist cited) claims by the Reformation-era German cleric Thomas Müntzer, concerning the free appropriation of nature’s products on the one hand, and the just distribution of property on the other. It then outlines how the philosopher John Locke proved to be pivotal in how this understanding of property came to be distorted in contemporary capitalist society. Finally, the paper links this distortion with a tendency to treat the concept of authority in a similarly limited way, and ends with a recommendation that we need to (re)broaden what we understand by property and authority accordingly.

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Blake article [PDF, 354.1 KB]
Updated 6 Jun 2013


Blake article [RTF, 760.0 KB]
Updated 6 Jun 2013


 
 

Limina: A Journal of Historical and Cultural Studies

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