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University of Baltimore Law

All Faculty Scholarship

2016

35 U.S.C. 101

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Defending Breakthrough Innovation: The History And Future Of The State Of Patent Law, Max Oppenheimer Oct 2016

Defending Breakthrough Innovation: The History And Future Of The State Of Patent Law, Max Oppenheimer

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Congress, while enacting at least six major revisions to patent law since 1793, has left the definition of patentable subject matter essentially unchanged. The Supreme Court, on the other hand, has been uncomfortable with the concept for more than a century. Despite this long-standing discomfort, it has struggled to advance a theoretical basis for its concern. In a series of recent cases, it has finally developed a theory as to why certain types of inventions, although embraced by the statutory definition, are nonetheless unpatentable. The theory, in effect, abandons the federal government’s role in protecting those inventions. This article explores …