This possibly in my mind intersects with a religious philosophy of property - the early Apostles observed at times communalism, rather than communism (voluntarily sharing material objects in common): "And all they that believed, were together, and had all things common." (Acts 2:44)
Augustine on embracing common rather than private property:
How many thousands believed, my brethren, when they laid down the price of their possessions at the Apostles' feet! But what says Scripture of them? Surely they have become a temple of God; not only each respectively a temple of God, but also all a temple of God together. They have therefore become a place for the Lord. And that you may know that one place is made for the Lord in all, Scripture says, They were of one heart and one soul toward God. But many, so as not to make a place for the Lord, seek their own things, love their own things, delight in their own power, are greedy for their private interests. Whereas he who wishes to make a place for the Lord, should rejoice not in his private, but the common good....
Let us therefore, brethren, abstain from the possession of private property; or from the love of it, if we may not from its possession; and we make a place for the Lord.
This possibly in my mind intersects with a religious philosophy of property - the early Apostles observed at times communalism, rather than communism (voluntarily sharing material objects in common): "And all they that believed, were together, and had all things common." (Acts 2:44)
Augustine on embracing common rather than private property:
https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/1801132.htm