We might think of our genetic code as something natural, part of us, certainly not "intellectual property" in the traditional sense. Yet corporations doing medical research have begun to patent certain genes, calling into question the whole idea of where property begins and ends.
We might think of our genetic code as something natural, part of us, certainly not "intellectual property" in the traditional sense. Yet corporations doing medical research have begun to patent certain genes, calling into question the whole idea of where property begins and ends.
We might think of our genetic code as something natural, part of us, certainly not "intellectual property" in the traditional sense. Yet corporations doing medical research have begun to patent certain genes, calling into question the whole idea of where property begins and ends.