A question that has recently attracted considerable attention is this:
What is the nature and significance of the normative relationship a person bears to herself (where the self is understood to include the whole embodied person)?
On one view, it is held that persons are self-owners: as Locke put it in one of the more famous passages in the Second Treatise:
[E]very man has a property in his own person: this no body has any right to but himself. The labour of his body, and the work of his hands, we may say, are properly his.