Another Libertarian Argument Against Patents Bites the Dust
Libertarians and Austrians, including such organizations as the CATO Institute, Von Mises, and the Wall Street Journal, have put forth a number of arguments against patents and intellectual property. These arguments include that ideas (an invention is not just an idea, but I will let that go) are not scarce and therefore patents are not real property rights, patents are monopolies, patents inhibit the growth of technology, patents require the use of force to enforce one’s rights, patents are not natural rights and were not recognized as so by Locke and the founders, among other arguments. I have discussed most of these arguments earlier and will put the links in below. One of their favorite fall back arguments is that patents limit what I can do with my property. For instance, a patent for an airplane (Wright brothers) keeps me from using my own wood, mechanical linkages, engine, cloth, etc. and building an airplane with ailerons (and wing warping). This according to the libertarian argument is obviously absurd. After all it is my property.
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Regarding Ramanujan, how many proofs of the Pythagorean theorem have you seen? The Wright Brothers wanted to patent everything derived from the idea of the airplane. Applied to the Pythagorean Theorem only one person would be allowed to own all of the possible proofs no matter how derived or presented. The analogy to physical objects is quite clear. It is generally true that in order to be a faithful copyist, a true second-hander, you must slavishly follow the original model and not put a single nuance into it. That seldom happens. In fact, the general rule appears to be that every so-called "copy cat" puts something new and different of themselves in the derivative work.
Objectivism seems to state that since one owns oneself, and by extension the fruits of one's labor and mind, then whatever is created by one is their personal property.
I cannot for the life of me see any moral argument that says that one person who develops an invention on Monday and another person who develops the same invention on Friday in a manner that was totally independent do not have equal rights to ownership. Time does not seem to be a salient factor. Whether I develop the invention on Monday or Friday is immaterial as to whether I used my mind to create the invention. By the premise of Objectivism, that should be my property regardless of whether someone else created the same thing at an earlier or later time, so long as the developments were done independently.
Now, there are practical considerations in how to demonstrate that the developments were truly independent that would need to be created. However, the current system which rewards the first and not the second, seems anti-thetical to Objectivism. I'm baffled as to the position that db takes - other than to realize that he is a patent attorney and vested in the system.
The upshot of the story is that this guy didn't invent for the money, other than it was able to fund his passion - racing. He did enough to fund his passion, but that was about it. He was an engineering genius, just had a habit that prevented him from realizing what he could achieve. So, it's not always money to keep inventing.
It should read: ... changed my mind? Does what I am trying to say ...
What I would like to say is this. If I am able to create, which means effort, and if I am a free man and able to think, I must decide, before I embark on that effort, why am I doing this? If I wish to sell it, I need to know if what I acheave is legally sellable. If I am doing it just for my own satisfaction, why would I care if somebody else copies my work? If he then starts selling it and I envy him, I have found out that I am not a very goof thinker. Why would the government want to help me attack the other guy? Just because I changed my mwhat I am trying to say make sense to you?
That said there are several papers on the rate of inventing before patent laws. These papers show that there is some natural (background) rate of invention and it is proportional to population and to a lesser degree population density.
My point was that there are incentives and motives. Some creators may not need any incentives, only motives. Others may grumblingly respond to incentives. I just thought that the picture DB was painting was too much black and white.
If I were not so undisciplined I could click "unsubscribe" couldn't I? I enjoy the company and am willingly paying for it with my precious lifetime, or what's left of it (another wink).
I am not sure I understand you questions:
But,
a) Mathematics is copyrightable but not patentable.
b) Utilitarianism always leads to a dictatorship. However, there are no contradictions between what is right and what is good for humans under Rand's ethics.
Creation, not recreation or rediscovery is the source of property rights including patents and copyrights.
Suppose that sort of work was patentable or given copyright, what are the implications? You may argue that however brilliant, it had been done before and the law does not give prizes for second place. I would argue, it ain't necessarily so, by asking, what is 'it' in this case? The result- a proof of a theorem, or is it the method, in this case undoubtedly original?
Only mathematical statements- Only! As I suggest for considering Ramanujan, it is not statements that matter, it is the proof, or for software a specific sequence of statements/instructions that have a purpose, that fulfill an objective.
I do not see any definitive resolution coming out of Objectivism, development of existing law, or libertarianism. It is not that Rand was wrong, I do not see the kind of thinking going anywhere.
Do these rights, a type of or a sort of property right,
a) lead by logic to rules that can be put into law, or,
b) are there things related to certain human desires/objectives that we want to achieve, such as economic growth, reduce the power of the state, preserve property rights, liberty of the individual, or promotion of the common good?
I am suggesting the latter. So, I think for progress we need to use utilitarianism (no apology for the rude words).
I could be quite wrong.
This comment- Fundamental principle of economics, people respond to incentives. Yes, but what are incentives? Money, property rights, the chance of money, the acclaim of others, the internal sense of achievement, are on the list. So the way I think agrees with your comment.
100 posts- careful, it may be habit forming. You will note that there is no member with exactly 100 posts proving it is not possible to stop (I got this argument from climate science).
I agree with the logic of the system we have now. I can't imagine aspirin still being patented. I can't imagine people developing new medicines without some period of patent protection.
I just don't understand the philosophical side. I would probably benefit from understanding more of the philosophy of real property. For some reason real property feels like a right, but IP feels like a very good policy idea.
I concur with your appraisal of Von Mises position, but I find it more difficult to accept the contradictions regarding Rand.
It is true these were the words of Howard Roark's courtroom speech from the Fountainhead. And, I believe people pursue their work for many reasons and rewards, but Roark felt ownership of his work, his designs, to such a degree that he blew up the distortion of it, because he felt such a deep ownership. That is why he was in court. Certainly one may pursue their work for the sheer driving desire to create, but once created and recognizing the value, the desire to protect that value and reap the benefits are not contradictory to these words, IMHO. Some, like Franklin, would create and give away their creations freely (e.g., the lightening rod), but that is their choice. Speaking historically as Roark does, he is expressing the basic desire even prior to such protections. I do not see his words as explicitly or implicitly contrary to support for patent rights. The modern Patent protects that ownership so that one does not have to blowup a building to protect one's intellectual property. He has recourse in court.
Well, that is the way I see it; for what it is worth.
Respectfully,
O.A.
Their point of view is completely inconsistent with Economist Zorina Khan http://www.amazon.com/The-Democratizatio..., in which she shows inventors and investors are motivated by patents. And we already know that the only way to increase real per capita incomes is by increasing your level of technology (which means inventions).
They also ignore the work of William Rosen's book the Most Powerful Idea "http://www.amazon.com/The-Most-Powerful-Idea-World/dp/0226726347
Their statement about property rights being the source of the Industrial Revolution is historical nonsense. Is inconsistent with the well established fact that new technologies are the only way to increase your standard of living.
So the connection is clear and JAMES BESSEN AND MICHAEL J. MEURER are ignoring the overwhelming evidence.
b) NO, there had been property rights for hundreds of years in England - at least as strong or stronger than today.
c) No there is absolutely no evidence for you point of view. Yes you can start growth by copying other peoples technology, but only until you catch up.
d) Yeah, you can't have patent rights in the absence of property right in general. So what. France had more people, a stronger scientific base and the Industrial Revolution started in England and the US, because of property rights.
CBJ you are just like the AGW prophets and the Creationists. You can always make up another excuse, but you are immune to logic and reason on this subject.
b) The industrial revolution coincided with the expanded recognition of property rights in general. Patents can’t take all the credit, and possibly not any of it.
c) Japan’s per capita income started to grow when it began adopting already existing technology on a wide scale. This would have occurred even if Japan had not copied the U.S. patent system.
d) The same can be said about countries that have the strongest recognition of non-patent property rights.
e) It’s true that enforcement of property rights for an asset will result in more investment in that asset, but it does not automatically follow that the asset in question is legitimate property. In early America, the institution of slavery led to the enforcement of property rights in slaves and to a high level of investment in slaves. This did not make them property in any moral sense.
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