Pasquale Joseph Federico

Pasquale Joseph Federico (March 25, 1902 – January 2, 1982[1]) was a lifelong mathematician and longtime head of the United States Patent Office.

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Biography

He was born in Monessen, Pennsylvania. About 1910 the family moved to Cleveland, Ohio where he gained a bachelor's degree in physics at Case Institute of Technology in 1923.[2]

He was instrumental in several major changes to how patents were issued and how intellectual property is treated. Federico also served for many years as the Patent Office's unofficial historian and editor of the "Journal of the Patent Office Society"". Some of his most well known contributions to the field of mathematics focused on the study of perfect squares and the writings of Descartes.

Federico is credited for providing the quotation underlying the scope of patentable subject matter under United States law when he testified before a House subcommittee in 1951 that "under section 101 a person may have invented a machine or manufacture, which may include anything under the sun that is made by man." This testimony was later quoted by the United States Supreme Court when the Court held in 1980 that living organisms were proper subject matter for patents.

Bibliography

Mathematics

Patent Office

Published by U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1957

References

  1. ^ "Descartes on polyhedra: a study of the De solidorum elementis", page vi, By Pasquale Joseph Federico. Edition: illustrated, Published by Springer, 1982 ISBN 0387907602, 9780387907604
  2. ^ Rich, Giles S. (1982). "P.J. (Pat) Federico and His Works". Journal of the Patent Office Society 64 (1). ISSN 0096-3577.