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At least when defining "slavery" as "restricting people to dispose freely of their time, space (or goods…)", and when considering the way most people on Earth are employed today, yes. Of course, if we define "slavery" as "harsh, senseless, cruel, violent, selfish abuse of other humans", then (I hope in the vast majority of cases), no, contemporary employment and slavery are different in kind. But I do think there are reasons to doubt this second definition to have been systematically accurate. For example, it makes no sense, from a cost-effectiveness point of view, for a slave owner to mistreat his slaves that much: it's in his best interest to make sure they live decently. Or, in a society where slavery is culturally acceptable, hence widespread, many slave owners must not have been this inhumane. I'm not saying it never occurred, merely that there are good reasons to think that it wasn't as systematic as we tend to believe. |
What's the cost-effectiveness of a master selling one of his female slave's children away from her, which was a regular occurrence?