It is not the natural state of things that a man may own an idea. Is to imitate someone to wrong them?
Both of you, please read my post. As stated below, the copyright clause is the only truly Constitutional insight we have into the matter. It says nothing about ideas, so you're pulling that notion from policy makers...not the Constitution. In addition, songs and films are not ideas. Also, I render my judgment at the end.
AutoDaas, I think many people misinterpret the copyright clause. It does not reference property. Rather, I think it was intended to fall in line with my summary at the end. I believe it is used to prevent medical ideas, farming methods, science, and the corresponding writings to be claimed as property as this would be detrimental to the general welfare of the United States. This seems to fall in line with the wording in the Constitution and the founders writings. Also, please see my line in the bold. I think that simple observation explains a lot about the intent of this clause.
Ninja Homer, Please refer to the post below. Also realize you are referring to laws that may or may not be unconstitutional. In fact, the only reference to copyrights in the Constitution is the copyright clause, and I dissect it below. The founders do not make any reference to intellectual property. Also, see my bold sentence, as it is a very interesting point. So, for all we know, there may not be two types of property. You may have been led to believe there are, but according to the clause below and writings of the founders, I don't believe this to be true. In fact, you and others here may be debating your point based on completely false information that doesn't relate to our supreme law at all. (And I don't mean the offensively, just a thought and observation.)
Does current copyright and patent law promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts?
Do the current terms for copyright and patent expiration benefit the public? There is a balance between a term so short that there is no economic incentive to invent and create, and a term so long that the public is securing the right to exclusive profit at the detriment of the advancement of the arts and sciences. Where are we on this scale?
(Remember, the reason for this clause is stated within the clause itself- promoting science and art, not private monetary gain.)
Are most copyrights held by inventors and artists, or by corporate persons not referred to in the constitution?
If the purpose of the copyright and patent offices are to further arts and sciences, doesn't it stand to reason that these entities should be reformed? A great example is the patenting of ideas strictly to block another entity from using it, or copyrighting common phrases with the hope of catching someone with a lawsuit.
I'm not referring to current law in regard to copyright and patent as I think it's all wrong and most of it is unconstitutional so we probably shouldn't debate based on that.
The clause does not state a reason for anything. We can not be sure what the founders meant science and
useful art. Could you define useful art? Again, what would make a book or song "useful art?" Could "useful art" be referring to methods such as the art of farming? What about writings? Could the writings be medical writings or methods and not novels or books? Are there any examples or instance of fiction novels by authors being copyrighted at that time that we can look to?
Also, keep in mind that there was composed music and song during that time and they do not specifically reference that in the clause. However, they were very specific on the items included. Also, the clause simply states the inventors and authors have the rights for a limited time....it doesn't place any restrictions on how many or the nature.
Again, please remember I'm looking at this simply from what the clause in the Constitution says...not current, distorted laws.
It is my personal opinion that, judging by the wording used in the Constitution and writings of the founders, the clause is there to prevent medical discoveries, scientific discoveries, and what I would consider useful arts such as farming methods and their corresponding writings from being claimed as property. The reason being is that this would be detrimental to the general welfare of the United States, while a novel or song is not.