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Innovation, Creativity and Law [electronic resource] / by W. Kingston.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Studies in Industrial Organization ; 12Publisher: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 1990Edition: 1st ed. 1990Description: X, 243 p. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9789400904552
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 338.6
LOC classification:
  • HD28-70
  • HD2321-4730.9
Online resources:
Contents:
I Between the Dreamer and the Mandarin -- II Innovation as Learning -- III Innovation and Money -- IV Property Rights and Innovation -- V Intellectual Property and Information Theory -- VI Financing Information and Ideas -- VII Some Innovatory Initiatives -- VIII Creativity in Innovation and Law.
In: Springer Nature eBookSummary: This book develops the theme of my earlier Innovation: The Creative Impulse in Human Progress, and considerably expands the latter book. I came to the study of innovation from experience in industry which had brought me into close practical contact with it, and my initial interest in the subject was in terms of the way in which it expressed human creativity. Progressively, however, my focus shifted towards the laws which help or hinder creativeness in being economically fruitful. This led to the writing of The Political Economy of Innovation and the editing of Direct Protection of Innovation. In the latter work, I had the opportunity of arguing the case for specific new law to complement the Patent system, and of having that case criticised by experts. Just as the first book set economic innovation in a wider context of creativity, the present one sets the law that makes it possible in a wider context of property rights. This is because my study of intellectual property resulted in growing awareness of the incomparable past value and even greater future potential of these rights for innovation and prosperity. My intellectual debt to Douglass North is as great in this later stage as it was to Joseph Schumpeter in the earlier one, and to Christopher Dawson, by whom I had the good fortune to be taught in person, in both.
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I Between the Dreamer and the Mandarin -- II Innovation as Learning -- III Innovation and Money -- IV Property Rights and Innovation -- V Intellectual Property and Information Theory -- VI Financing Information and Ideas -- VII Some Innovatory Initiatives -- VIII Creativity in Innovation and Law.

This book develops the theme of my earlier Innovation: The Creative Impulse in Human Progress, and considerably expands the latter book. I came to the study of innovation from experience in industry which had brought me into close practical contact with it, and my initial interest in the subject was in terms of the way in which it expressed human creativity. Progressively, however, my focus shifted towards the laws which help or hinder creativeness in being economically fruitful. This led to the writing of The Political Economy of Innovation and the editing of Direct Protection of Innovation. In the latter work, I had the opportunity of arguing the case for specific new law to complement the Patent system, and of having that case criticised by experts. Just as the first book set economic innovation in a wider context of creativity, the present one sets the law that makes it possible in a wider context of property rights. This is because my study of intellectual property resulted in growing awareness of the incomparable past value and even greater future potential of these rights for innovation and prosperity. My intellectual debt to Douglass North is as great in this later stage as it was to Joseph Schumpeter in the earlier one, and to Christopher Dawson, by whom I had the good fortune to be taught in person, in both.

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