| Should Morality be Within the Purview of Patent Law?<!g>Beth Arnold, M.S., J.D., Foley, Hoag & Eliot 
  
  
    
      | Patents are Economic in Purpose
  Congress shall have the power
to promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors
  and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries. (Article 1, section 8 of the U.S. Constitution) |  
      | Morality is not a Patentability Consideration in the US. It is in Europe.US 
  Any new, useful, and nonobvious machine, manufacture or composition of matter is patentable.Everything under the sun made by man. (Diamond v Chakrabarty) Europe 
  EPC law (Art. 53(a)) and EC Biotech Patent Directive exclude inventions, the commercial exploitation of which would be contrary
  to the ordre public. |  
      | The EC Directive Gives a Non-exhaustion List of Immoral Inventions
  Processes for <!g>cloning humans;Processes for modifying human <!g>germline;Use of human embryos for industrial or commercial purposes;Processes for modifying animal germline, which cause suffering without substantial medical benefitPlant & animal varieties and essential biological processes for their production |  
      | Arguments for Amending the Law to Prohibit Patenting of Certain Technologies
  Will disincentivize investment in and ultimate commercialization of the technologyUpholds the sanctity of life and human dignityAddresses public suspicion and distrust, perhaps facilitating acceptance of other technologies. |  
      | Arguments for Maintaining the Status Quo
  Will threaten the USs competitive advantage in biotechnologyThere are other more effective means for regulating life science technologies (<!g>NIH, FDA, EPA, USDA)Moral norms change over time.Biotechnology does not pose a direct threat to a readily identifiable norm. |  
      | So Which Technologies are Morally Unacceptable?
  Human Cloning?<!g>Transgenic Animals?<!g>Embryo Technologies?Genetically Modified Foods?Genes? |  
  
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