You're making a lot of assumptions about what other people have and have not done.
Maybe just add your own observations without doing that?
Am I making an assumption when your response to me was citing what Claude said?
I'm not surprised.
My point isn't whether it's hidden in a footnote or note, it's the footnote explains the full context and while on the surface some of that terminology may seem like it agrees with your stance, when you actually dig into what is really meant by those terms, that notion is completely discredited.
It's basically the same pattern I observed earlier, where you never articulated nor seemed to comprehend the difference between natural rights and common-law rights.
I didn't say that it agreed with my stance. Once again, you are so focused on "winning an argument" that you completely misunderstand why I said one should read it: I found it
interesting. It's an engagement with the idea of your "literary property" as a natural right, how that would function, what are the potentially problematic interactions, and how it could be brought about. It's a very interesting piece, but here you are trying to act like it is hiding something that is rather bluntly exclaimed and explained in the piece as being "hidden away" in a footnote. I like it because it has more cites and sources about the topic, interesting quotes, and ideas on how it would actually function.
Again, I assert that you don't seem to have read the piece because you clearly don't understand what the author set forth
in the introduction.
The whole paper, as far as I can tell...I admit I'm kind of glazing over...is basically an argument for what she thinks the law should do, which is treat IP as real property, but she also acknowledges that it hasn't in the past.
She's not really saying what it
should do, but rather exploring the concept of literary property, how it relates and interacts with the idea of copyright, the problems with it, and how one could implement it.
Like,
just read this:
In Part II, this Article examines the notion of literary property as a distinct legal concept, which protects an author’s natural right in a manuscript because of the innate connection between a creator and his work. This discussion shows that literary property safeguards an author’s creative interests and expectations against the rest of society, including printers and publishers who purchased the right to print the manuscript. Part III considers whether literary property can be equated to the modern property right that statutory copyright creates. Part III concludes that literary property and copyright are distinct legal concepts, and proposes that the two different bases for recognizing ownership of creative works—natural property and economic incentives—should be explicitly recognized as separate and distinct ideas to ensure clarity in policy that determines legal entitlements to creative works. Part IV evaluates how such a separation of natural property and economic incentives affects and shapes the debate of the elusive balance between private rights and the public interest. Part IV surmises that a separation of rights from incentives and the acknowledgement of specific norms recognizing authors’ entitlements and obligations will allow the copyright system to realize its constitutional goal of “promot[ing] the Progress of Science and useful Arts.3
Edit: Eh, she is more prescriptive with her conclusion, but at any rate I find it all to be pretty well-reasoned and her counter-arguments from 547 to 552 to be interesting.