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    Pouring owned tomato juice into the unowned ocean does no... — Carmelics
    Home/Rights & Liberty
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    Challenges→Mixing something owned with something unowned is not sufficient to ground a claim of appropriation over the unowned thing

    Pouring owned tomato juice into the unowned ocean does not give the pourer ownership of the ocean

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    If mixing owned labor with unowned things generated ownership, then mixing any o...

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    Instead, the owned thing (tomato juice) is lost rather than the unowned thing (o...
    Mixing something owned with something unowned is not sufficient to ground a clai...

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    Instead, the owned thing (tomato juice) is lost rather than the unowne...86%Full self-ownership condemns as wrongful even very minor infringements...60%When one's owned labor is mixed with something unowned, the unowned th...60%If mixing owned labor with unowned things generated ownership, then mi...60%

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    This argument suffers from well-known problems. For instance, since laboring is an activity, the idea of mixing it with an object seems at best a metaphor for something else. But in that case, the argument is incomplete: we still need to know what really grounds property rights (Waldron 1988). More importantly, it simply is not true that mixing something owned with something unowned is sufficient for appropriation. As Nozick pointed out, if I pour a can of tomato juice that I own into the unowne

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