In To Invent Is Divine: Creativity and Ownership, Jim makes the case that creativity and ownership are inseparable—and that weakening intellectual property rights threatens the flourishing that invention enables. He draws connections between faith, history, and policy to explore why protecting intellectual property is about more than law or economics.
Highlights from our conversation:
From Genesis to Jefferson: How creation implies ownership, and why even some Founders wrestled with protecting that principle in law.
Cycles of Patent Strength and Weakness: Why America’s “golden age” of inventors gave way to Progressive Era restraints—and how history may be repeating itself.
Policy at the Crossroads: Jim breaks down three bipartisan bills—PARA, PREVAIL, and RESTORE—and what it will take to get them passed.
Leadership at the USPTO: Why Acting Director Coke Morgan Stewart has already made an impact, and Jim perspective on the incoming Director John Squires and the path that he should follow.
Bipartisanship Matters: From his work with Eagle Forum, Jim explains why protecting patents requires coalition-building across party lines.
Why it matters
Creativity without ownership can lead to secrecy, stagnation, and scarcity. When the two are combined, society benefits from innovation and progress. Jim’s perspective offers both philosophical and practical insight into the patent debates shaping America’s innovation future.
🎧 Listen to the full episode on YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts.
📘 Learn more about James’s book “To Invent Is Divine, Creativity and Ownership” here.
👉 Do you think America needs stronger patent rights to fuel the next wave of innovation? Share your thoughts in the comments.
📢 Giveaway: Everyone who subscribes to the Clause 8 YouTube channel and comments on this episode’s video with the hashtag #Clause8Podcast will be entered into a drawing to win a copy of James Edwards’s book To Invent Is Divine: Creativity and Ownership