In my article “Argumentation Ethics and Liberty: A Concise Guide,” I noted that for some time I’ve thought of putting together some material into an “argumentation-ethics reader” book. However, logistic, copyright, and other issues would delay the preparation and actual publication of a book for a long time (at best)—and since most of the pieces I would include are online, I instead put together a “skeletal” outline, with links where available, with the chapters that would be included in such a book — I called it “Discourse Ethics and Liberty: A Skeletal Ebook.” Likewise, for some time I’ve kicked around the idea of assembling articles critical of IP, mostly from a libertarian or free market perspective. Maybe some day I’ll get around to getting permissions and resources to put an actual book together, but for now I’ve provided the chapters I would included, along with links to the original source material.
The Intellectual Property and Liberty Reader: A Skeletal Ebook
Part One: Overviews
- “The Case Against IP: A Concise Guide,” by Stephan Kinsella
- “The Fight against Intellectual Property,” by Jacob H. Huebert
Part Two: Historical Works
- Arnold Plant, “The Economic Theory Concerning Patents for Inventions,” Economica, New Series, 1, no. 1 (Feb., 1934).
- Fritz Machlup, U.S. Senate Subcommittee On Patents, Trademarks & Copyrights, An Economic Review of the Patent System, 85th Cong., 2nd Session, 1958, Study No. 15 (text excerpt) [”Report to the US congress from 1958, which also extensively narrates the history of the patent movement and of earlier economic research on this subject. Machlup, a renowned American economist of Austrian origin, is the first author of a large treatise on knowledge economics and other treatises which belong to the teaching repertoire of economics departments in universities. His report cites a wealth of historical and economic evidence to refute most of the reasoning used by lawyers to legitimate the patent system.”]
- Fritz Machlup & Edith Penrose, “The Patent Controversy in the Nineteenth Century,” Journal of Economic History 10 (1950), p. 1
- John Perry Barlow, “The Economy of Ideas: A framework for patents and copyrights in the Digital Age,” Wired (1994)
Part Three: Economists
- Murray N. Rothbard, Knowledge, True and False
- ———, Man, Economy, and State and Power and Market, Scholars Edition, pp. liv, 745-54, 1133-38, 1181-86
- Hayek: see Tucker, “Misesian vs. Marxian vs. IP Views of Innovation“; Tucker, “Hayek on Patents and Copyrights“;
- Salerno, Hayek Contra Copyright Laws
Part Three: Propertarian Approaches
- Against Intellectual Property, by Kinsella
- “How to Slow Economic Progress”
- “Rethinking IP”
- “Intellectual Freedom and Learning Versus Patent and Copyright”
- “Ideas are Free: The Case Against Intellectual Property: or, How Libertarians Went Wrong“
- “Goods, Scarce and Nonscarce” (with Tucker)
- “The Death Throes of Pro-IP Libertarianism”
- “Reducing the Cost of IP Law”
- “Intellectual Property and Libertarianism”
- “Radical Patent Reform Is Not on the Way”
- Owning Ideas Means Owning People, by Roderick Long
- The Libertarian Case Against Intellectual Property Rights, by Long
- Thoughtcrime, by Long
- Bear Becomes Mushroom; Trout Implicated, by Long
- Comments on Bedirhanoğlu and Schaefer, by Long
- Kinsella, The Patent, Copyright, Trademark, and Trade Secret Horror Files
Part Four: Empirical Approaches
- Boldrin & Levine, Against Intellectual Monopoly
- Boldrin, M. and D. K. Levine [2004]: “IER Lawrence Klein Lecture: The Case Against Intellectual Monopoly,” International Economic Review, 45: 327-350
- “What’s Intellectual Property Good for?,” Revue Economique, forthcoming 2011 (with Levine)
- Tucker, “Ideas, Free and Unfree: A Book Commentary” (commentaries on Boldrin and Levine’s Against Intellectual Monopoly)
- “Does Intellectual Monopoly Help Innovation” (with Levine)
- “Intellectual Property and the Incentive Fallacy,” by Eric E. Johnson
- “Patents and Copyrights: Do the Benefits Exceed the Costs?”, by Julio Cole
- “Would the Absence of Copyright Laws Significantly Affect the Quality and Quantity of Literary Output?“, by Cole
- Review of Patent Failure by James Bessen and Michael J. Meurer
- The Promise of a Post-Copyright World
- What Is Free Software?
- QuestionCopyright.org — Introduction and FAQ
- “There’s No Such Thing as a Free Patent,” by Stephan Kinsella
- Francois Leveque & Yann Meniere, The Economics of Patents and Copyrights
David Koepsell
- “Revising Intellectual Property: Liberating Intellectual Capital,” Innovation, Sustainability, and Development: A New Manifesto, by David Koepsell
- “A Patent Too Far,” Washington Times (Op-ed with Kenneth Alfano), by David Koepsell
- How Genes are Like Plutonium (Neither Should Be Patentable), by David Koepsell
- “Back to Basics: How Technology and the Open Source Movement Can Save Science,” by David Koepsell
- Intellectual Property: Silly or Sinister?, The Freeman (January/February 2011), vol. 61, no. 1
- “The Case For Patents Harming Innovation,” by Mike Masnick
- Copyright and Patent in Benjamin Tucker’s periodical Liberty, by Wendy McElroy
- Contra Copyright, Again, by McElroy
- Musical Condoms: Make Mine Whistle “Dixie”, by McElroy
- Patently Absurd, by McElroy
- All Creative Work Is Derivative, by Nina Paley
- Copying Is Not Theft, by Paley
- Four Freedoms of Free Culture, by Paley
- Understanding Free Content, by Paley
- “Intellectual Property” is Slavery, by Paley
- Free as in Phreedom, by Paley
Jeffrey Tucker
- “A Book that Changes Everything,” by Tucker
- “A Theory of Open,” by Tucker
- “up with iTunes U,” by Tucker
- Mises.org in the Context of Publishing History,” by Tucker
Other Publications and Resources
- Tom W. Bell, Intellectual Privilege: Copyright, Common Law, and the Common Good (draft)
- ———, The Great Debate on Intellectual Property, in Cato Policy Report (January/February 2002)
- Kevin Carson, Intellectual Property — A Libertarian Critique
- Pierre Desrochers, On the Abuse of Patents as Economic Indicators, Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics (Winter 1998)
- ———, “Excludability, Creativity and the Case Against the Patent System,” Economic Affairs, vol. 20, no. 3 (September 2000), pp. 14-16
- Doug French, “The Intellectual Revolution Is in Process“
- Charles Johnson (RadGeek), “Patents Kill” (I) and “Patents Kill“ (II); ———, ”Libertarians for Protectionism” (1, 2, 3)
- Samuel Edward Konkin III, “Copywrongs,” The Voluntaryist (July 1986)
- Daniel Krawisz, The Fallacy of Intellectual Property, Mises Daily (Aug. 25, 2009)
- Ludwig von Mises, Human Action 3rd rev. ed. Chicago: Henry Regnery (1966), chap. 23, section 6, pp. 661–62; see also pp. 128, 364
- Re Mises, see also Kinsella, “Mises on Intellectual Property“
- Gary North, Don’t Invest in Copyright-Protected Companies (Nov. 5, 2003)
- Tom Palmer, “Intellectual Property: A Non-Posnerian Law and Economics Approach”
- ———, “Are Patents and Copyrights Morally Justified? The Philosophy of Property Rights and Ideal Objects”
- George Reisman, Capitalism, pp. 388-89 & 417-20; also 40, 96, 187, 216, 233.
- Sheldon Richman on Intellectual Property versus Liberty
- Sheldon Richman, Intellectual “Property” Versus Real Property: What Are Copyrights and What Do They Mean for Liberty?, The Freeman (12 June 2009)
- ———, “Slave Labor and Intellectual Property: On a misplaced analogy,” The Freeman Online (June 3, 2011)