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Noah Webster’s first American dictionary, for example, defined “art” as “[t]he disposition or modification of things by human skill, to answer the purpose intended,” such as “the art of building or engraving.”<ref>1 Noah Webster, "An American Dictionary of the English Language" (1828) (Webster). Webster appended the following comment: “Arts are divided into useful or mechanic, and liberal or polite. The mechanic arts are those in which the hands and body are more concerned than the mind; as in making clothes, and utensils. These arts are called trades. The liberal or polite arts are those in which the mind or imagination is chiefly concerned; as poetry, music and painting.” ''Id.''</ref> Consistent with Webster’s definition, numerous writings at the time used the phrase “useful arts” to refer to manufacturing processes and other applied trades.<ref>''See, e.g.,'' Daniel Defoe, A General History of Discoveries and Improvements in Useful Arts (1727) (providing history of technological developments); Tench Coxe, An Address to an Assembly of the Friends of American Manufactures 17 (1787) (describing manufactured goods and processes as “useful arts”); ''id.'' at 18 (describing progress in the “useful arts” as having produced improvements in various manufactures, from ships to whips to watches); George Logan, A Letter to the Citizens of Pennsylvania, on the Necessity of Promoting Agriculture, Manufactures, and the Useful Arts 12-13 (1800) (referring to manufacturing processes as “useful arts,” and emphasizing the relationship of a country’s prosperity to its progress in the useful arts); W. Kenrick, An Address to the Artists and Manufacturers of Great Britain 21-38 (1774) (contrasting the “useful arts” with the “polite arts”).</ref>
 
Noah Webster’s first American dictionary, for example, defined “art” as “[t]he disposition or modification of things by human skill, to answer the purpose intended,” such as “the art of building or engraving.”<ref>1 Noah Webster, "An American Dictionary of the English Language" (1828) (Webster). Webster appended the following comment: “Arts are divided into useful or mechanic, and liberal or polite. The mechanic arts are those in which the hands and body are more concerned than the mind; as in making clothes, and utensils. These arts are called trades. The liberal or polite arts are those in which the mind or imagination is chiefly concerned; as poetry, music and painting.” ''Id.''</ref> Consistent with Webster’s definition, numerous writings at the time used the phrase “useful arts” to refer to manufacturing processes and other applied trades.<ref>''See, e.g.,'' Daniel Defoe, A General History of Discoveries and Improvements in Useful Arts (1727) (providing history of technological developments); Tench Coxe, An Address to an Assembly of the Friends of American Manufactures 17 (1787) (describing manufactured goods and processes as “useful arts”); ''id.'' at 18 (describing progress in the “useful arts” as having produced improvements in various manufactures, from ships to whips to watches); George Logan, A Letter to the Citizens of Pennsylvania, on the Necessity of Promoting Agriculture, Manufactures, and the Useful Arts 12-13 (1800) (referring to manufacturing processes as “useful arts,” and emphasizing the relationship of a country’s prosperity to its progress in the useful arts); W. Kenrick, An Address to the Artists and Manufacturers of Great Britain 21-38 (1774) (contrasting the “useful arts” with the “polite arts”).</ref>
   
The drafters of the early patent statutes and other influential figures in early patent law sometimes contrasted the [[useful arts]] with the field of general knowledge and learning, which at the time was known as “science.”<ref>The useful “arts” are the domain of patent law, while the promotion of “science” &mdash; general knowledge and learning &mdash; is the constitutional object of [[copyright law]]. ''See'' [[Eldred v. Ashcroft]], 537 U.S. 186, 192-93 (2003); H.R. Rep. No. 1923, 82d Cong., 2d Sess. 4 (1952); Karl B. Lutz, "Patents and Science: A Clarification of the Patent Clause of the U.S. Constitution," 18 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 50, 51 (1949) (Lutz). ''See, e.g.,'' Arthur H. Seidel, "The Constitution and a Standard of Patentability," 48 J. Pat. Off. Soc’y 5, 11-12 & n.14 (1966) (Seidel) (citing contemporaneous editions of Samuel Johnson’s A Dictionary of the English Language); Johnson’s Dictionary of the English Language, in Miniature 192 (Joseph Hamilton ed., C. Whittingham 1818). Tench Coxe, an early proponent of manufacturing, described as separate fields the “useful arts and manufactures” and the “sciences and the fine arts.” ''See'' A Statement of the Arts and Manufactures of the United States of America for the Year 1810, at xlix (1814) (Coxe); ''see also Webster,'' “art.”</ref> Similarly, Thomas Jefferson described two “inventions” patented in England &mdash; an iron bridge and steam power &mdash; as falling within the field of “arts,” while describing “science” as encompassing more general fields of knowledge.<ref>14 The Papers of Thomas Jefferson 697-99 (Julian P. Boyd ed., Princeton University Press 1958) (letter to Joseph Willard, Mar. 24, 1789).</ref>
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The drafters of the early patent statutes and other influential figures in early patent law sometimes contrasted the [[useful arts]] with the field of general knowledge and learning, which at the time was known as “science.”<ref>The useful “arts” are the domain of patent law, while the promotion of “science” &mdash; general knowledge and learning &mdash; is the constitutional object of [[copyright law]]. ''See'' Eldred v. Ashcroft, 537 U.S. 186, 192-193
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(2003); H.R. Rep. No. 1923, 82d Cong., 2d Sess. 4 (1952); Karl B. Lutz, "Patents and Science: A Clarification of the Patent Clause of the U.S. Constitution," 18 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 50, 51 (1949) (Lutz). ''See, e.g.,'' Arthur H. Seidel, "The Constitution and a Standard of Patentability," 48 J. Pat. Off. Soc’y 5, 11-12 & n.14 (1966) (Seidel) (citing contemporaneous editions of Samuel Johnson’s A Dictionary of the Eng- lish Language); Johnson’s Dictionary of the English Language, in Miniature 192 (Joseph Hamilton ed., C. Whittingham 1818). Tench Coxe, an early proponent of manufacturing, described as separate fields the “useful arts and manufactures” and the “sciences and the fine arts.” ''See'' A Statement of the Arts and Manufactures of the United States of America for the Year 1810, at xlix (1814) (Coxe); ''see also Webster,'' “art.”</ref> Similarly, Thomas Jefferson described two “inventions” patented in England &mdash; an iron bridge and steam power &mdash; as falling within the field of “arts,” while describing “science” as encompassing more general fields of knowledge.<ref>14 The Papers of Thomas Jefferson 697-699 (Julian P. Boyd ed., Princeton University Press 1958) (letter to Joseph Willard, Mar. 24, 1789).</ref>
 
 
 
Notably, the fields of pure finance and business, unconnected to technology or industry, were viewed as falling within the “sciences,” but not within the “useful arts.” In a discussion of progress in industrial fields as well as the surrounding political and economic system, Tench Coxe described “the mechanical and chemical branches” as separate from “the system of labor and political economy.”<ref>''Coxe,'' at l.</ref> He also noted that foreign investors were now comfortable investing in the “manufactures and the useful arts,” just as they had long invested in the realms of “commerce, navigation, stocks, banks and insurance companies.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> Similarly, Alexander Hamilton distinguished in The Federalist No. 8 between “the arts of industry, and the science of finance.”<ref>The Federalist No. 8, at 69 (Alexander Hamilton) (Clinton Rossiter ed., 1961).</ref> In sum, because the initial patent statutes were intended to foster the “[[useful arts]],” they were directed to technological and industrial inventions, as opposed to fields of purely human activity &mdash; including financial and economic activity unconnected to technology &mdash; which fell within the sciences or liberal arts.<ref>''See Lutz,'' at 54 (“The term ‘useful arts,’ as used in the Constitution and in the titles of the patent statutes is best represented in modern language by the word ‘technology.’”); ''see also Coulter,'' at 499 (“‘useful arts’ must be understoodto include not only [contemporaneous] industrial and manufacturing arts,” but also innovations in other evolving “technological fields”); Paulik v. Rizkalla, 760 F.2d 1270, 1276 (Fed. Cir. 1985) (en banc) (“The exclusive right, constitutionally derived, was for the national purpose of advancing the useful arts &mdash; the process today called technological innovation.”).</ref>
 
Notably, the fields of pure finance and business, unconnected to technology or industry, were viewed as falling within the “sciences,” but not within the “useful arts.” In a discussion of progress in industrial fields as well as the surrounding political and economic system, Tench Coxe described “the mechanical and chemical branches” as separate from “the system of labor and political economy.”<ref>''Coxe,'' at l.</ref> He also noted that foreign investors were now comfortable investing in the “manufactures and the useful arts,” just as they had long invested in the realms of “commerce, navigation, stocks, banks and insurance companies.” <ref>''Id.''</ref> Similarly, Alexander Hamilton distinguished in The Federalist No. 8 between “the arts of industry, and the science of finance.”<ref>The Federalist No. 8, at 69 (Alexander Hamilton) (Clinton Rossiter ed., 1961).</ref> In sum, because the initial patent statutes were intended to foster the “[[useful arts]],” they were directed to technological and industrial inventions, as opposed to fields of purely human activity &mdash; including financial and economic activity unconnected to technology &mdash; which fell within the sciences or liberal arts.<ref>''See Lutz,'' at 54 (“The term ‘useful arts,’ as used in the Constitution and in the titles of the patent statutes is best represented in modern language by the word ‘technology.’”); ''see also Coulter,'' at 499 (“‘useful arts’ must be understoodto include not only [contemporaneous] industrial and manufacturing arts,” but also innovations in other evolving “technological fields”); Paulik v. Rizkalla, 760 F.2d 1270, 1276 (Fed. Cir. 1985) (en banc) (“The exclusive right, constitutionally derived, was for the national purpose of advancing the useful arts &mdash; the process today called technological innovation.”).</ref>
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