Requirement for patent Β·Designs must be product of invention to be patentable
Examples of things that are not inventions: law of nature, logical axiom, general principles (such as the idea that wind can be used to produce energy).
Software is just expression of an idea, which falls within domain of copyright. Only need slight changes to copyright law to adequately protect financial incentive of developers.
Passage Style
Critique or debate
Problem-analysis
25.
In the final paragraph, the βββββββββ ββββ ββββββββ ββββββββ ββββββββββ βββ ββββββββββ ββ βββββ ββ βββ ββββ ββ ββββββββ βββββ βββββββββ βββββββββ ββ
Question Type
Purpose in context (of word, phrase, or idea)
Structure
The author makes this assertion to support the claim that β[software programs] fall more appropriately within the established domain of copyright law.β Copyright law protects βonly the particular way in which the underlying ideas are expressed.β So if software programs are an βexpression of ideas in the form of specific texts,β this fact supports the claim that copyright law should protect software programs.
a
an example of β ββββββββββββββββ βββββ
The author doesnβt suggest that the claim goes against our common-sense intuitions. So thereβs no support for the claim that the authorβs purpose is to provide an example of something counterintuitive.
b
a rationale for βββ ββββββββ ββββββββ
This best captures the authorβs purpose. The author makes this assertion to support the claim that β[software programs] fall more appropriately within the established domain of copyright law.β Copyright law protects βonly the particular way in which the underlying ideas are expressed.β So if software programs are an βexpression of ideas in the form of specific texts,β this fact supports the claim that copyright law should protect software programs.
c
a causal explanation βββ β ββββββββββ ββββββββββ
The author isnβt trying to provide a causal explanation of a phenomenon (a thing or event that happens in the world). There is no phenomenon discussed in this part of the passage. Whether software programs should get copyright protection isnβt a phenomenon; whether they should be patentable isnβt a phenomenon. Furthermore, the claim that software programs constitute an expression of ideas doesnβt tell us the cause of something.
d
a layperson's definition ββ β βββββββββ βββββ ββββ
The authorβs assertion is part of the authorβs argument. Itβs not an attempt to help laypeople understand a term. Although the author elaborates on the meaning of βspecific texts,β that elaboration is part of the authorβs attempt to show how software programs constitute expression of ideas and therefore deserve copyright protection.
e
a point of βββββββββ βββββββ ββββββββ ββββββββββ
Although there may be support for the idea that both the author and the patent proponents believe software programs are expressions in the form of sequences of code, the authorβs purpose isnβt to show a point of agreement. The assertion helps support the authorβs own view that copyright law should protect software programs.
Difficulty
78% of people who answer get this correct
This is a moderately difficult question.
It is significantly easier than other questions in this passage.
CURVE
Score of students with a 50% chance of getting this right
25%138
148
75%158
Analysis
Purpose in context (of word, phrase, or idea)
Structure
Critique or debate
Law
Problem-analysis
Answer Popularity
PopularityAvg. score
a
3%
152
b
78%
162
c
5%
151
d
7%
156
e
7%
155
Question history
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