What is Property: Definition and 635 Discussions

Property (latin: Res Privata) in the abstract is what belongs to or with something, whether as an attribute or as a component of said thing. In the context of this article, it is one or more components (rather than attributes), whether physical or incorporeal, of a person's estate; or so belonging to, as in being owned by, a person or jointly a group of people or a legal entity like a corporation or even a society. Depending on the nature of the property, an owner of property has the right to consume, alter, share, redefine, rent, mortgage, pawn, sell, exchange, transfer, give away or destroy it, or to exclude others from doing these things, as well as to perhaps abandon it; whereas regardless of the nature of the property, the owner thereof has the right to properly use it (as a durable, mean or factor, or whatever), or at the very least exclusively keep it.
In economics and political economy, there are three broad forms of property: private property, public property, and collective property (also called cooperative property). Property that jointly belongs to more than one party may be possessed or controlled thereby in very similar or very distinct ways, whether simply or complexly, whether equally or unequally. However, there is an expectation that each party's will (rather discretion) with regard to the property be clearly defined and unconditional, so as to distinguish ownership and easement from rent. The parties might expect their wills to be unanimous, or alternately every given one of them, when no opportunity for or possibility of dispute with any other of them exists, may expect his, her, its or their own will to be sufficient and absolute. The Restatement (First) of Property defines property as anything, tangible or intangible whereby a legal relationship between persons and the state enforces a possessory interest or legal title in that thing. This mediating relationship between individual, property and state is called a property regime.In sociology and anthropology, property is often defined as a relationship between two or more individuals and an object, in which at least one of these individuals holds a bundle of rights over the object. The distinction between "collective property" and "private property" is regarded as a confusion since different individuals often hold differing rights over a single object.Types of property include real property (the combination of land and any improvements to or on the land), personal property (physical possessions belonging to a person), private property (property owned by legal persons, business entities or individual natural persons), public property (state owned or publicly owned and available possessions) and intellectual property (exclusive rights over artistic creations, inventions, etc.), although the last is not always as widely recognized or enforced. An article of property may have physical and incorporeal parts. A title, or a right of ownership, establishes the relation between the property and other persons, assuring the owner the right to dispose of the property as the owner sees fit. The unqualified term "property" is often used to refer specifically to real property.

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  1. Mk

    Colligative property of ice cream HELP

    Colligative property of ice cream HELP! How is the colligative property in effect during the manufacture of ice cream, and in the ice cream??
  2. A

    Does the Finite Intersection Property Allow Multiple Points in T1 Spaces?

    Let X be a space. Let \mathcal{D} be a collection of subsets of X that is maximal with respect to the finite intersection property. Show that if X satisfies the T_1 axiom, there is at most one point belonging to: I = \bigcap _{D\in \mathcal{D}}\bar{D} A collection of subsets has the...
  3. B

    How Does the Quotient Property Relate to tan 0?

    sec 0 = 1/cos 0 Write the quotient property expressing tan 0 as a quotient of two other trigonometric functions...is there someone that please lead me in the right direction? Bryce
  4. K

    Proof of Injective Function Property

    I had this question on a test today. Prove that if a function f:X-->Y is injective, then f(X\setminus A) \subset Y\setminus f(A), \forall A \subset X. This is how I did it: If x_1 is in A, then y_1=f(x_1) is in f(A). Because the function is injective, we can pick (cut Y into pieces) f(A) and...
  5. C

    Test Review 2 - a property of the infimum

    Another question: Prove that if a set E in R has a finite infimum and e > 0 is any positive number, then there is a point a in E such that inf E <= a < inf E + e. The first part, inf E <= a, is obvious from the definition of infimum. I am having trouble showing that a < inf E + e, even...
  6. C

    What is the significance of 0.2% in determining proof load?

    I got a material property data for a steel as follows. 1.0.2% of proof load 358kg 2.0.2% of proof stress 28.64(kg/sqmm) My questions are 1)what is proof load 2)what is 0.2% of proof load. Why 0.2%? Why not 0.3% 3)How this proof load is arrived while testing the specimin in a...
  7. M

    Show the commutative property with dot product

    Hello everyone, does anyone know the proof of the dot products communative property (a)(b) = (b)(a) or any websites that show the dot products communative property? or other properties? Thanks! The book only shows the distributed property.
  8. I

    Proving Uniform Continuity on a Closed Bounded Interval

    How do I prove that when a function f is continuous on a closed bounded interval [a,b], it is uniformly continuous on that interval? Actually, I have found some proofs to this but I have not tackled about compact, Heine-Borel theorem, metric spaces, sequences and series, etc. in my class..
  9. Chi Meson

    Which word should go with which set of attributes: property or characteristic?

    "property" vs "characteristic" OK, semantic hair-splitting time. The two words "property" and "characteristic" mean essentially the same thing, but they are often distinguished from each other in textbooks. For example, with waves there are two sets of attributes (yet another synonym) "the...
  10. K

    What property to look for to see if a matrix is diagonalizable?

    Hi, Just say you are given a 3x3 matrix with a value k in it. What would be the best way to find out if it is diagonalizable or not for certain values of k? The matrix in question is -1 0 0 k 1 0 -2 1 -1
  11. A

    Vanishing of a cyclic integral the property of a state function?

    Why is the vanishing of a cyclic integral the property of a state function?
  12. E

    Reading about the property of satisfiability

    I'm not sure where this thread would go, but here it is... I am reading about the property of satisfiability. And trying to get some things straight. I saw different kinds of logics (porpositional, relational) being tested for satisfiability. I've read about models and formal systems. The...
  13. G

    Can a landlord charge us whatever they want for security deposit deductions?

    Hi all Recently my roomates and I moved out of a duplex we rented. The security deposit was $2000. Our landlord said we did not clean the house at all (which is a huge lie) and charged us $1000, another $800 for removal of furniture (everyone says they took everything so no one knows what...
  14. R

    How to read Thermodynamic property tables?

    I can't remember for the life of me how to read Themodynamic property tables! I want to find answers to questions for example: What is the internal energy of 1kg of saturated steam at 10 bar or 3kg of water at 130C Can anyone help or know of any good websites which has information on how...
  15. F

    News Supreme Court Rules Property Rights

    This ruling makes me very nervous. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050623/ap_on_go_su_co/scotus_seizing_property_10;_ylt=AjD7WnZAJ_f_VjRE9mHYjPduCM0A;_ylu=X3oDMTBiMW04NW9mBHNlYwMlJVRPUCUl I must admit nothing but pure contempt for developers, mostly because of the power they already have in...
  16. F

    High Melting and Boiling Points: A Characteristic of Petroleum?

    quick question WOULD high melting points and boiling points be a property of petrolium aka crude oil.
  17. L

    Does the Distributive Property Apply to Infinite Terms?

    I was thinking about x=0.999.. so 10x=9.999... therefore 10x-x=9 when I asked myself does the distributive property apply to an infinite number of terms since 0.9999...= sum(9/10^(-k), k=1,2...)? Maybe I'm confused about what "=" means.
  18. J

    Proof of Strictly Upper Triangular Matrix Property by James

    Hi, I need help with this proof relating to strictly upper-triangular matrices. Let A be an n x n strictly upper triangular matrix. Then the (i,j-th entry of AA = A^2 is 0 if i >= j - 1. Here's what I have. Pf: Let B = A^2. The (i,j)-th entry of B is given by b_{ij} =...
  19. M

    Is science a property of nature or a property of us?

    So I've been thinking lately about what physics is really about. Isn't it true that at the end of the day physics is just a logical construction for us to understand the material world? Nobody has ever litterly 'seen' enities like energy, charge, electrons or even time and space. Simply...
  20. Y

    Exploring the Geometric Property of a Planar Curve [gamma]

    Recall that every point (x, y) in the plane is described by its radius- vector r = xi + yj. A planar curve [gamma] has the following geometric property: at every point on the curve the radius vector and the tangent intersect at a fixed angle [alpha]. 1. Derive a first order differential...
  21. S

    Basic question regarind archimedian property

    I need to prove that if I := [0, 1/n], the element 0 belongs to all I(n) and the archimedian property to show that 0 is the only common point. so basically, I need to prove the intersection from 1 to infinite of I(n) = {0}. the book says to use the archimedian property that if t > 0, then...
  22. C

    How to Calculate Contour Integrals Using the Given Property?

    Hi, I'm having a bit of trouble with this question. Use the property |integral over c of f(z)dz|<=ML to show |integral over c of 1/(z^2-i) dz|<=3pi/4 where c is the circle |z|=3 traversed once counterclockwise thanks in advance for any tips.
  23. T

    Vectors Property: Necessary & Sufficient Conditions

    Consider N vectors, V_1 ... V_N, (not all zero) in an N-dimensional space. Project these vectors to a 2-dimensional plane, P. Let us denote the results for the i'th vector as (a_i,b_i) in Cartesian coordinates defined on the plane. We will be interested in considering these coordinates as a...
  24. A

    Prove property of diophantine equation

    Show that the diophantine equation x^2 - y^2= n is solvable in integers iff n is odd or 4 divides n.
  25. T

    I need a proof for this binomial property.

    Hi, I've spent dozen of hours searching by my-self and dozen of hours searching on the Web. Now I need help. Who could provide a proof for this binomial property ? I need it for another proof. Thanks Tony Let: F_n=2^{2^n}+1 , n \geq 2 . Prove: F_n \text{ prime } \Longrightarrow F_n...
  26. T

    A property of Chebyshev polynomials

    Hi, I fail finding a proof (even in MathWorld, in my Mathematic dictionary or on the Web) for the following property of Chebyshev polynomials: (T_i o T_j)(x) = (T_j o T_i)(x) = T_ij(x) when x is in ] -inf ; + inf [ Example : T_2(x) = 2x^2-1 T_3(x) = 4x^3-3x T_3(T_2(x)) = T_2(T_3(x)) =...
  27. A

    Proof of the scaling property of an impulse function

    I am presently taking my first course in signals and systems and I have been charged with proving the scaling property of the impulse function; that: delta(a(t-to)) = 1/abs(a)*delta(t-to) I am seriously miffed and need some help.
  28. R

    Why do mirrors reverse images left-to-right?

    There has been this question that has been bothering me for quite sometime. It is an assignment question I failed to answer... Can anyone explain to me in terms of light and the laws of reflection the reason why Mirrors reverse an image left-to-right?
  29. M

    Is Consciousness an Emergent Property of a Master Algorithm?

    Wow, this forum's changed a lot since the last time I logged-on... Anyway, since I may not be able to get back on the Forums again, I wanted to make sure that I explained something which I only sort of glossed over in previous threads, and which probably would have been useful in those...
  30. steersman

    Is time a necessary property of physics?

    I ask this becuase I see time as the free flow of cause and effect within our own consciouness. And a descriptor for the process of change in the world around us. What if all events suddenly ceased to happen - the universe completely static. Does time still flow for the physicist...
  31. Antonio Lao

    Is Density a Quantum Property?

    In the physics of elementary particles, as far as I know, there can be three definitions of density. 1. density is the ratio of mass per unit length. 2. density is the ratio of mass per unit area. 3. density is the ratio of mass per unit volume. Quarks and leptons are almost point...
  32. Loren Booda

    Time's arrow, or what universal property is asymmetric, anyway?

    "Time's arrow, or what universal property is asymmetric, anyway?" A lot has been made of time's arrow not appearing in the equations of Newton, statistical mechanics, relativity and quantum mechanics - none preferring that past precedes the future or vice versa. Some very specific particle...
  33. S

    Why is the Archimedian Property used?

    We are currently busy in calculus in proving limits of series ans sequences exist and so on. We use epsilon arguments to prove these things. Somewhere in the proof, the Archimedian Property is used i.e. for every real number x there exists a natural number k such that k > x. I don't understand...
  34. Ivan Seeking

    Property sales out of this world

    I keep asking myself: Why do I work for a living? http://www.reviewjournal.com/lvrj_home/2003/Sep-29-Mon-2003/news/22251899.html
  35. A

    What would be the fifth dimensional property of a Tesseract?

    I understand the Tesseract, but What would be the fifth dimensional property? Does it have to do with tunneling properties of particles? And how would time act in the fourth dimension? I do understand a little about physics, but in consideration that I know very little, please IN LAMENS TERMS!
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