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CONVERSATION IV - PROPERTY—continued

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 September 2011

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Summary

MRS. B

NOW that we have traced the rise and progress of civilization to the security of property, let us see whether the reverse, that is to say, insecurity of property in a civilized country, will not degrade the state of man, and make him retrace his steps till he again degenerates into barbarism.

CAROLINE

Are there any examples of a civilized people returning to a savage state? I do not recollect ever to have heard of such a change.

MRS. B

No, because when property has once been instituted, the advantages it produces are such, that it can never be totally abolished; but in countries where the tyranny of government renders it very insecure, the people invariably degenerate, the country falls back into poverty, and a comparative state of barbarism. We have already noticed the miserable change in the once wealthy city of Tyre, Egypt, which was the original seat of the arts and sciences, is now sunk into the most abject degradation; and if you will read the passages I have marked for you in Volney's travels, you will find the truth of this observation very forcibly delineated.

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Chapter
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Conversations on Political Economy
In Which the Elements of that Science are Familiarly Explained
, pp. 47 - 61
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1816

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