Inventing the Industrial Revolution: The English Patent System, 1660-1800

Przednia okładka
Cambridge University Press, 9 maj 2002 - 316
This book examines the development of the English patent system and its relationship with technical change during the period between 1660 and 1800, when the patent system evolved from an instrument of royal patronage into one of commercial competition among the inventors and manufacturers of the Industrial Revolution. It analyses the legal and political framework within which patenting took place and gives an account of the motivations and fortunes of patentees, who obtained patents for a variety of purposes beyond the simple protection of an invention. It includes the first in-depth attempt to gauge the reliability of the patent statistics as a measure of inventive activity and technical change in the early part of the Industrial Revolution, and suggests that the distribution of patents is a better guide to the advance of capitalism than to the centres of inventive activity. It also queries the common assumption that the chief goal of inventors was to save labour, and examines contemporary criticism of the patent system in the light of the changing conceptualisation of invention among natural scientists and political economists.
 

Spis treści

Patents 15501660 law policy and controversy
10
The laterStuart patent grant an instrument of policy?
20
The development of the patent system 16001800
40
The judiciary and the enforcement of patent rights
58
The decision to patent
75
Invention outside the patent system
97
Patents in a capitalist economy
115
The longterm rise in patents
144
The goals of invention
158
Patents criticisms and alternatives
182
A new concept of invention
201
Notes
223
Bibliography
272
Index
293
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