The Ontology of the Intellectual Commons

Authors

  • Antonios Broumas UNIVERSITY OF WESTMINSTER

Keywords:

intellectual commons, commons-based peer production, ontology, definition

Abstract

 Intellectual commons are the great other of intellectual property‒enabled markets. They constitute noncommercial spheres of intellectual production, distribution, and consumption, which are reproduced outside the circulation of intangible commodities and money. They provide the core common infrastructures of intellectual production, such as language, nonaggregated data and information, prior knowledge, and culture. This article formulates a processual ontology of the intellectual commons by examining the substance, elements, tendencies, and manifestations of their being. The first part of the article introduces the various definitions of the concept. The second part focuses on the elements, which constitute the totalities of the intellectual commons. The third part emphasizes their structural tendencies. Finally, the fourth and last part of the article deals with the various manifestations of the intellectual commons in the domains of culture, science, and technology.

Author Biography

Antonios Broumas, UNIVERSITY OF WESTMINSTER

Antonios Broumas is a technology lawyer, a social researcher and an activist in movements that promote social autonomy and the commons. Antonios has studied law at the University of Athens and holds postgraduate degrees in philosophy of law and IT & e-Comms law. His main areas of interest, research and writing focus on the interaction between law, technology and society. Antonis has published articles in the fields of ICT law, critical media theory and critical jurisprudence. He is currently working on his PhD regarding the interaction of intellectual commons with the law. Antonis can be contacted at info@lawandtech.eu.

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Published

2017-03-29

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Section

Articles