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Pope Benedict XVI encyclical letter denounces excessive zeal for assertions of 
intellectual property rights in knowledge

By kei-staff, on July 7th, 2009


Pope Benedict XVI today issued a statement saying that ?On the part of rich 
countries, there is excessive zeal for protecting knowledge through an unduly 
rigid assertion of the right to intellectual property, especially in the field 
of health care.? The criticism came in a section of his most recent encyclical 
letter dealing with social issues, and specifically focusing on international 
human development and systemic failures of bodies large and small to solve 
development problems.

Caritas in Veritate/ Charity in Truth, dated June 29, 2009, is Pope Benedict 
XVI?s third encyclical letter. The 30,468 word document contains an 
introduction, six chapters, a conclusion and 159 footnotes, and deals largely 
with social issues of importance to the church.*

In a June 13 announcement, the Pope said that the document would ?highlight 
what, for us as Christians, are the objectives that need to be pursued and what 
values to be tirelessly promoted and defended in order to create a truly free 
and united form of human coexistence.?

Section 22 of the letter, entitled ?Human Development in Our Time,? laid out 
the Pope?s vision of human development goals. It also highlighted the failings 
of the current system, citing rigid ideology, consumerist ?superdevelopment?, 
corruption, and ?cultural models and social norms of behavior ?. which hinder 
the process of development.? Casting a strikingly pragmatic tone, the 
encyclical underscores the complexity of development issues, which ?should 
prompt us to liberate ourselves from ideologies, which oversimplify reality in 
artifical ways, and ? lead us to examine objectively the full human dimension 
of the problems.?

While Papal Encyclicals do not determine official doctrine for the Church, they 
do offer a chance to annunciate the personal thoughts of the Pope and encourage 
specific priorities that the Pope wishes to set for the Church. Encyclicals 
such as the Caritas in Veritate are traditionally addressed to church heads, 
and not to the laiety at large (though the current one seems to be an 
exception, and all are made available publicly). They are the second most 
important statement that can be issued by the Pope (after an Apostolic 
Constitution, which proclaims dogma and/or issues of canon law).

22. Today the picture of development has many overlapping layers. The actors 
and the causes in both underdevelopment and development are manifold, the 
faults and the merits are differentiated. This fact should prompt us to 
liberate ourselves from ideologies, which often oversimplify reality in 
artificial ways, and it should lead us to examine objectively the full human 
dimension of the problems. As John Paul II has already observed, the 
demarcation line between rich and poor countries is no longer as clear as it 
was at the time of Populorum Progressio[55]. The world?s wealth is growing in 
absolute terms, but inequalities are on the increase. In rich countries, new 
sectors of society are succumbing to poverty and new forms of poverty are 
emerging. In poorer areas some groups enjoy a sort of ?superdevelopment? of a 
wasteful and consumerist kind which forms an unacceptable contrast with the 
ongoing situations of dehumanizing deprivation. ?The scandal of glaring 
inequalities?[56] continues. Corruption and illegality are unfortunately 
evident in the conduct of the economic and political class in rich countries, 
both old and new, as well as in poor ones. Among those who sometimes fail to 
respect the human rights of workers are large multinational companies as well 
as local producers. International aid has often been diverted from its proper 
ends, through irresponsible actions both within the chain of donors and within 
that of the beneficiaries. Similarly, in the context of immaterial or cultural 
causes of development and underdevelopment, we find these same patterns of 
responsibility reproduced. On the part of rich countries there is excessive 
zeal for protecting knowledge through an unduly rigid assertion of the right to 
intellectual property, especially in the field of health care. At the same 
time, in some poor countries, cultural models and social norms of behaviour 
persist which hinder the process of development.

*?Encyclical Letter Caritas In Veritate Of The Supreme Pontiff Benedict XVI To 
The Bishops Priests And Deacons Men And Women Religious The Lay Faithful And 
All People Of Good Will On Integral Human Development In Charity And Truth,? 
June 29, 2009. 
http://www.vatican.va/holy_father/benedict_xvi/encyclicals/documents/hf_ben-xvi_enc_20090629_caritas-in-veritate_en.html.

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