IN a recent seminar I attended, an interesting
sideshow
grabbed my attention. A small group of the participants, what you call
a “petit comite” huddled in a corner to tackle a very intriguing,
complex issue.
They were talking about Intellectual Property Right (IPR),
and one of them, a book publisher, was complaining about how his books
are pirated even by those close to him, who copy and spread his
publications through electronics.
This book publisher is a close friend of mine, and I truly
commiserate with him with regard to the decrease of business he is now
suffering because of the new technologies. But everybody else was also
my friend. I listened to both sides, and tried to sort out things.
At the end of the day, what came forming in my mind was the
idea that while there is such thing as IPR and private property, we
should also be moving towards a sense of universal ownership over all
thing goods, natural and man-made, that we have at the moment.
We have been negligent in that area, content with the status
quo that obviously needs to be updated, if not purified and corrected,
especially given the new developments and phenomena we are having
today.
This, in fact, has been echoed in one of the points in the
Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church. Point 179 hits it
bull’s eye when it says:
“The present historical period has placed at the disposal of
society new goods that were completely unknown until recent times.
“This calls for a fresh reading of the principle of the
universal destination of the goods of the earth and makes it necessary
to extend this principle so that it includes the latest developments
brought about by economic and technological progress.
“The ownership of these new goods—the results of knowledge,
technology and know-how—becomes ever more decisive, because ‘the
wealth of the industrialized nations is based much more on this kind
of ownership than on natural resources.
“New technological and scientific knowledge must be placed
at the service of mankind’s primary needs, gradually increasing
humanity’s common patrimony…
“It is necessary to break down the barriers and monopolies
which leave so many countries on the margins of development, and to
provide all individuals and nations with the basic conditions which
enable them to share in development.”
Sorry for the long quote, but I believe it is necessary to
make this doctrine more known by everyone. The challenge we have at
hand is enormous, since it would involve drastic and radical changes
in our attitudes and culture.
Thing is we cannot deny the fact that while there is a need
for reasonable profit for one’s work, we should avoid making our
creations and inventions a tool for greed and dominion over others.
This is how I feel when I see how pharmaceutical products
and the electronic goods are so commercialized that they worsen the
gaps and divisions among peoples and nations. The rich get richer,
while the poor get poorer. The smart ones get smarter, while the
less-endowed get more miserable.
I have seen people dying simply because of what I feel as an
inadequate if not unfair system of ownership we have at the moment.
This situation is crying to heaven for correction.
With respect to the use of the goods of the earth, we should
not make money the primary consideration. It’s charity. It’s justice.
It’s mercy and compassion. These elements have to enter prominently in
the equation. Otherwise, we would just be building an inhuman world.
So, this sense of universal ownership has to be made more
familiar to everyone, especially to our leaders and other movers and
shakers in the world. In another point of the Compendium, the same
idea is articulated.
Point 178 says: “Man should regard external things that he
legitimately possesses not only as his own but also as common in the
sense that they should be able to benefit not only him but also
others.”
Obviously, the road to this sense of universal ownership is
tricky, to say the least. But we have to start. We may have to tackle
the issue differently through the many items and cases involved in
this question, but we have to start somewhere.
How I hope that a serious effort be done in this regard! It
can be done anywhere—in the Church structure, or civil society, or
government, or academe. But we need to do something about this.
May we be inspired to pursue this need further.
grabbed my attention. A small group of the participants, what you call
a “petit comite” huddled in a corner to tackle a very intriguing,
complex issue.
They were talking about Intellectual Property Right (IPR),
and one of them, a book publisher, was complaining about how his books
are pirated even by those close to him, who copy and spread his
publications through electronics.
This book publisher is a close friend of mine, and I truly
commiserate with him with regard to the decrease of business he is now
suffering because of the new technologies. But everybody else was also
my friend. I listened to both sides, and tried to sort out things.
At the end of the day, what came forming in my mind was the
idea that while there is such thing as IPR and private property, we
should also be moving towards a sense of universal ownership over all
thing goods, natural and man-made, that we have at the moment.
We have been negligent in that area, content with the status
quo that obviously needs to be updated, if not purified and corrected,
especially given the new developments and phenomena we are having
today.
This, in fact, has been echoed in one of the points in the
Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church. Point 179 hits it
bull’s eye when it says:
“The present historical period has placed at the disposal of
society new goods that were completely unknown until recent times.
“This calls for a fresh reading of the principle of the
universal destination of the goods of the earth and makes it necessary
to extend this principle so that it includes the latest developments
brought about by economic and technological progress.
“The ownership of these new goods—the results of knowledge,
technology and know-how—becomes ever more decisive, because ‘the
wealth of the industrialized nations is based much more on this kind
of ownership than on natural resources.
“New technological and scientific knowledge must be placed
at the service of mankind’s primary needs, gradually increasing
humanity’s common patrimony…
“It is necessary to break down the barriers and monopolies
which leave so many countries on the margins of development, and to
provide all individuals and nations with the basic conditions which
enable them to share in development.”
Sorry for the long quote, but I believe it is necessary to
make this doctrine more known by everyone. The challenge we have at
hand is enormous, since it would involve drastic and radical changes
in our attitudes and culture.
Thing is we cannot deny the fact that while there is a need
for reasonable profit for one’s work, we should avoid making our
creations and inventions a tool for greed and dominion over others.
This is how I feel when I see how pharmaceutical products
and the electronic goods are so commercialized that they worsen the
gaps and divisions among peoples and nations. The rich get richer,
while the poor get poorer. The smart ones get smarter, while the
less-endowed get more miserable.
I have seen people dying simply because of what I feel as an
inadequate if not unfair system of ownership we have at the moment.
This situation is crying to heaven for correction.
With respect to the use of the goods of the earth, we should
not make money the primary consideration. It’s charity. It’s justice.
It’s mercy and compassion. These elements have to enter prominently in
the equation. Otherwise, we would just be building an inhuman world.
So, this sense of universal ownership has to be made more
familiar to everyone, especially to our leaders and other movers and
shakers in the world. In another point of the Compendium, the same
idea is articulated.
Point 178 says: “Man should regard external things that he
legitimately possesses not only as his own but also as common in the
sense that they should be able to benefit not only him but also
others.”
Obviously, the road to this sense of universal ownership is
tricky, to say the least. But we have to start. We may have to tackle
the issue differently through the many items and cases involved in
this question, but we have to start somewhere.
How I hope that a serious effort be done in this regard! It
can be done anywhere—in the Church structure, or civil society, or
government, or academe. But we need to do something about this.
May we be inspired to pursue this need further.
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