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Biotechnology and the Utilitarian Argument for Patents*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 January 2009
Extract
Biotechnology surpasses even computer technology in predictions of its potential for revolutionary effects on humankind. It includes agribusiness (genetically engineered plants, animals, hormones, etc.) and phar-maceuticals (diagnostics, genetic therapies, etc.). The U.S. government began investing heavily in biotechnology research in the 1980s, and by 1987 had spent approximately $2.7 billion to support research and development (R and D), including $150 million for agricultural biotechnology. The approximately sixty U.S. biotechnology companies invested $3.2 billion in R and D in 1991 alone, with a total of more than $10 billion spent since the industry began in the late 1970s.
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- Copyright © Social Philosophy and Policy Foundation 1996
References
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7 Some authors make a distinction between the argument that patents encourage R and D, and the argument that they encourage an inventor to disclose her invention rather than keeping it secret. Since in either case the patent is seen as an inducement for the inventor to benefit society, I will consider them two different parts of a utilitarian argument.
8 J. S. Mill and Jeremy Bentham both argued for the patent system on grounds of distributive justice: it is only fair that the inventor receive a reward for his efforts, in proportion to the benefit he has given society. This seems to me to be closer to the argument that inventors have a natural right to their inventions. The argument that patents are justified as an incentive to inventors is more often identified as utilitarian, despite the positions of Mill and Bentham.
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61 They also have the potential for funding pure research, as they often do now. Social utility need not be the only criterion for awarding research grants; or, a certain level of funding for pure research may best promote long-run utility.
62 One might worry about the established scientific community's resistance to really innovative ideas. This is already a topic of concern within the grant system. One proposed solution is to set aside money specifically for very new avenues of research which challenge established ideas, and in fact the NIH is now funding research on “alternative” medicine as a result of this concern. Moreover, even if the patent system were eliminated, the grant system might be combined with some other way(s) of encouraging innovation.
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72 shoes, Wooden, or sabotsGoogle Scholar, the French root of “saboteur.” There are various stories about this. According to one story, workers in the early Industrial Revolution threw their sabots into machinery to stop it, probably in a protest against mechanization. Another story has it that workers would saboter—work clumsily, clattering their wooden shoes as they walked.
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75 See ibid.
76 Lacy, , Bush, , and Cole, , “Biotechnology and Agricultural Cooperatives,” p. 80.Google Scholar The authors cite an anonymous personal interview.
77 And, if utility is to be defined in terms of preference-satisfaction, I assume that an individual's preferences are incompletely described by her actions in the economic realm.
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84 Although I think that the patent system is unjustified on utilitarian grounds, I am not a utilitarian. I would favor a natural rights approach to justifying intellectual property. However, I suspect that such an approach might not justify the current American patent system, and it also might not justify the patenting of, e.g., genetically engineered life-forms.
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