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Information as public domain. A philosophical argument against intellectual private property

Pievatolo, Maria Chiara (2004) Information as public domain. A philosophical argument against intellectual private property. Bollettino telematico di filosofia politica.

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Abstract

The paper presents two arguments against the idea of private intellectual property: 1. a modern argument, derived from a parallel reading of two essays of Kant: "Von der Unrechtmäßigkeit des Büchernachdrucks" and "Über ein vermeintes Recht aus Meschenliebe zu lügen" that should explain why Kant refused to apply the concepts of private property to ideas and speeches 2. an ancient, and more basic argument, from Plato's "Meno" and his idea of anamnesis: research and learning can work – and avoid Meno's paradox – only if it is assumed a previous continuum of a common, contextual and interconnected knowledge

Keywords:Kant
intellectual property
freedom of information
Plato
Subjects:E. Publishing and legal issues. > EE. Intellectual freedom.
ID Code:2553
Deposited By:Pievatolo, Maria Chiara
Deposited On:17 November 2004
Alternative Locations:http://bfp.sp.unipi.it/english/art/pievatol.htm
All fields:Show all fields

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