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Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
Both patent law and its philosophical underpinnings regard subsequent inventors as having no rights to the manufacture or distribution of their product. You are presenting your own definition of a patent, which attempts to get around the glaring deficiencies of the standard definition by allowing an exception in the case of an “independent inventor”. And in doing so you are contradicting yourself.
If the invention created by the second inventor is indeed the “product of his own mind”, then the case for granting special privileges to the first inventor collapses. Man has a right to the product of his own mind. This right is not contingent upon whether someone previously had the same idea or came up with the same invention.
So you say that the invention created by the second inventor is not the “product of his own mind”. But if that is true, then your entire case for making any exception for the second inventor collapses. If the invention is not a product of the second inventor’s mind, how is he entitled to any kind of special treatment apart from those who did not invent the product?
So my position is that if you didn't come up with it first the No it is not a product of your mind and that the person who originally came up with it, can "afford" the rare one offs of someone building one for personal use. But that it would be theft for that person to market the product.
You say that “as long as you (the subsequent inventor) are not selling the product you have the right to make and use anything that you can produce.” As far as I know, neither patent law nor the philosophy behind alleged patent rights allow for this exception. And by making such a statement, you are in effect admitting that my independently created invention is a product of my own mind.
Requiring me to perform patent research before using or selling my product is an initiation of force, regardless of how little or how much time such research takes.
The rest of your post consists of assertions with no evidence. You claim that the first person to come up with the idea or invention deserves government-enforced exclusivity on the implementation of that idea for a period of time determined by that same government. No he doesn’t. No one deserves special privileges that violate the rights of others.
Of course as long as you are not selling the product you have the right to make and use anything that you can produce. But as soon as you want to sell it the first guy to patent deserves his cut.
You are a free agent with a skill set.
Of course, the highest bidder wins your time.
You make money to advance yourself, perhaps to also feed a family.
Only socialists would think anything about you belongs to them.
And all that little bit ain't hard for old dino to figure out.
When you are engineering devices or producing drugs the situation is significantly different.
The highest bidder wins my time.
I suppose I am a capitalistic prostitute (of sorts).
Not a bad gig...as long as there are an abundance of "Johns" !
The rub will come when government decides that my time belongs to them. 😬
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