If you grew up with telephones, i think you have a different etiquette than if. You would never get up in themiddle of a dinner to go answer your phone. Tho, mi wo gan, i scasee you to mind. I tax orsi, don't know its mine. Tins. We've never gott more than 60. And so there really is genuine disagreement no matter who the audience is. If you're born with the norm it's very different then if if it's evolved or changed during your lifetime. writ older people are shocked, i think, still, when people answer their sephone at the table or do things self owned etiquette.
Law professors Michael Heller and James Salzman talk about their book, Mine! with EconTalk host Russ Roberts. Heller and Salzman argue that ownership is trickier and more complicated than it looks. While we tend to think of something as either mine or not mine, there's often ambiguity and a continuum about who owns what. Salzman and Heller explore a wide and surprising range of property rights from everyday life. The conversation includes a discussion of the insights of Ronald Coase on the assignment of property rights when rights conflict.