知的所有権と不道徳:精神に有害な創作物の保護に抗して<br>Intellectual Property and Immorality : Against Protecting Harmful Creations of the Mind

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知的所有権と不道徳:精神に有害な創作物の保護に抗して
Intellectual Property and Immorality : Against Protecting Harmful Creations of the Mind

  • 著者名:Snow, Ned
  • 価格 ¥17,353 (本体¥15,776)
  • Oxford University Press(2021/11/23発売)
  • ポイント 157pt (実際に付与されるポイントはご注文内容確認画面でご確認下さい)
  • 言語:ENG
  • ISBN:9780197614402
  • eISBN:9780197614426

ファイル: /

Description

Should a machine that emits harmful levels of pollution receive patent protection? Should pornography receive copyright protection? This book argues that certain intellectual creations should not receive patent or copyright protection on the grounds that those works are harmful to society. The book posits that the theories of intellectual property and the Intellectual Property Clause of the U.S. Constitution suggest this conclusion. It also considers several counterarguments: in particular, that denying protection might increase the output of objectionable works, that other laws should address moral problems, and that intellectual property functions better under a laissez-faire approach. Despite these counterarguments, the book contends that law should never encourage or reward harmful behavior. This simple principle implies that courts should exercise their equitable powers to deny enforcement of intellectual property for works involving unlawful conduct. It implies that courts should deny protection for works that clearly fall outside the Intellectual Property Clause's scope of protectable works. And it implies that Congress should consider denying protection for works that pose clear harms to society. The book also addresses the intersection between denying intellectual property protection and maintaining free speech protection. In that regard, the book recognizes that the Free Speech Clause severely limits Congress's discretionary authority to deny copyright protection for expression that it deems immoral. The book concludes that courts, Congress, and government agencies should exercise limited discretion in deciding whether certain intellectual works are morally eligible for intellectual property protection.

Table of Contents

Detailed Table of ContentsPrefaceChapter 1: IntroductionChapter 2: Moral Limitations in IP TheoryChapter 3: Arguments Against Denying ProtectionChapter 4: The Problem of Judicial Moral DiscretionChapter 5: Works Involving Unlawful ConductChapter 6: Judicial History on Unlawful WorksChapter 7: The Progress Provision as a LimitationChapter 8: Progress, Science, and useful ArtsChapter 9: Legislating MoralityChapter 10: Free SpeechChapter 11: Tying It All TogetherBibliographyTable of CasesIndex

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