The Money Exception: How Monetary Abstraction Cancels the Moral Limits of Private Property — and How Life-Value Restores Them | ChatGPT5.2 & NotebookLM

Modern political economy rests on an implicit moral inversion: money, originally a means of exchange, has become the governing standard of value. This paper traces that inversion to a pivotal but underexamined move in early liberal property theory — the treatment of money as a morally exceptional object. Reconstructing the original life-grounded constraints on private property articulated by John Locke, the analysis shows how labor, sufficiency, and non-waste once functioned as intrinsic moral limits. The introduction of money, conceived as non-perishable and value-neutral, quietly bypassed these limits in practice without refuting them in principle.

The paper names this bypass the money exception and demonstrates how it reverses the value order of society: life ceases to govern property, and property — measured monetarily — comes to govern life. Drawing on John McMurtry’s Life-Value Onto-Axiology, the paper distinguishes between life-sequence and money-sequence systems and explains why money-governed systems reliably generate ecological degradation, public health failure, and social insecurity while appearing economically successful.

Rather than rejecting markets or private property, the paper argues for restoring the life-grounded conditions that once made them morally intelligible. It reframes contemporary crises as a correctable design flaw in the moral architecture of political economy and offers a coherent basis for re-embedding money, markets, and property within the requirements of life itself.

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Revisiting John Locke: Rediscovering the Ethical Foundations of Property Rights | ChatGPT4o

Table of Contents

  • Can you explain what John McMurtry means (regarding John Locke’s life-grounded private property rights provisos) in this excerpt from The Rights of the “Human” over the “Non-Human”: The Undeclared World War of Human Rights versus Corporate Rights?:
  • Please go into so more detail and explain how the introduction of money led to property accumulation and is the fundamental flaw in capitalist ideology with examples?
  • When, where, how, why, and by whom did this uncoupling occur and for whose benefit and harm?
  • At this juncture in time, given the lessons learnt from the sum total of human awareness and understandings over the years manifesting from this uncoupling, what are the possible solutions to align with Locke’s provisos and McMurtry’s life-ground and fix all of our social institutions to regenerate holistic individual well-being, social equity and environmental sustainability through and through?

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How Unexamined Premises Lead to World Oppression: John Locke, The Theory of Private Property and Money by Professor John McMurtry

Reproduced from:  https://artsonline.uwaterloo.ca/rneedham/sites/ca.rneedham/files/needhdata/McMurtry-1.html How Unexamined Premises Lead to World Oppression: John Locke, The Theory of Private Property and Money John McMurtry College of Arts Department of Philosophy University of Guelph The most fundamental principle of the market doctrine is the grounding of human right and freedom in private property. This principle is foundational because one… Read More