Memes and Copyright

Article by Thomas F. Cotter

Memes are hypothetical units of cultural transmission discussed and debated in the writings of Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett, and other contemporary scientists and philosophers. This Article uses the meme concept to address several aspects of copyright law. In particular, the Article presents the copyright system as forming part of the environment within which these units of information replicate and evolve. Changes in the copyright system affect not only the quantity of memes that are created and published, but also their diffusion, diversity, and quality, and the ways in which these units compete against one another for human attention spans. These evolutionary changes are unpredictable in their particulars, but it may be possible on occasion to predict some rough trends and to foresee potential tradeoffs along the various dimensions of quantity, quality, diversity, and diffusion.


About the Author

Thomas F. Cotter. Professor of Law, Washington and Lee University School of Law.

Citation

80 Tul. L. Rev. 331 (2005)