United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit 
 
 
 
2007-1130 
(Serial No. 08/833,892) 
 
 
 
IN RE BERNARD L. BILSKI 
and RAND A. WARSAW 
 
 
 
 David 
C. 
Hanson, The Webb Law Firm, of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, argued for 
appellants.   With him on the brief were Richard L. Byrne and Nathan J. Prepelka. 
 
 Raymond 
T. 
Chen, Associate Solicitor, Office of the Solicitor, United States Patent 
and Trademark Office, of Arlington, Virginia, argued for the Director of the United States 
Patent and Trademark Office.  With him on the brief were James A. Toupin, General 
Counsel,  Stephen Walsh, Acting Solicitor, and Thomas W. Krause, Associate Solicitor.  Of 
counsel on the brief were Jeffrey S. Bucholtz, Acting Assistant Attorney General, John J. 
Fargo, Director, Intellectual Property Staff, Commercial Branch, and Scott R. McIntosh and 
Mark R. Freeman, Attorneys, Appellate Staff, Civil Division, United States Department of 
Justice, of Washington, DC. 
 
 
John F. Duffy, Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson LLP, of Washington, DC, 
argued for amicus curiae Regulatory Datacorp, Inc.  Of counsel on the brief were Thomas 
S. Biemer, Steven I. Wallach, and Philip J. Foret, Dilworth Paxson LLP, of Philadelphia, 
Pennsylvania; and John A. Squires, Goldman, Sachs & Co., of New York, New York. 
 
 
William F. Lee, Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP, of Boston, 
Massachusetts, argued for amici curiae Financial Services Industry, Bank of America, et 
al., and for all other amici.  With him on the brief for Financial Services Industry, Bank of 
America, et al., were Randolph D. Moss, Donald R. Steinberg, and Felicia H. Ellsworth, 
and Seth P. Waxman, of Washington, DC. 
 
 
J. Michael Jakes, Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, Garrett & Dunner, L.L.P., of 
Washington, DC, for amicus curiae Accenture.   With him on the brief were Erika H. Arner 
and Ronald E. Myrick, and Denise W. DeFranco, of Cambridge, Massachusetts.  Of 
counsel on the brief was Wayne P. Sobon, Accenture, of San Jose, California.   
 
 
Christopher A. Hansen, American Civil Liberties Union Foundation, of New York, 
New York, for amicus curiae American Civil Liberties Union. 
 
 
 

 
Kenneth C. Bass, III, Sterne, Kessler, Goldstein & Fox P.L.L.C., of Washington, DC, 
for amicus curiae American Express Company.  With him on the brief were Robert Greene 
Sterne and Michelle K. Holoubek.  Of counsel on the brief was Maxine Y. Graham, 
American Express Company, of New York, New York.   
 
 
Kelsey I. Nix, Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP, of New York, New York, for amicus 
curiae American Institute of Certified Public Accountants.   With him on the brief was 
Heather M. Schneider.  
 
 
Meredith Martin Addy, Brinks Hofer Gilson & Lione, of Chicago, Illinois, for amicus 
curiae American Intellectual Property Law Association.  With her on the briefs was Charles 
M. McMahon.  Of counsel on the briefs were James Pooley and Judith M. Saffer, American 
Intellectual Property Law Assocation, of Arlington, Virginia, and Denise W. DeFranco, 
Barbara A. Fiacco, James M. Flaherty, Jr., and Miriam Pogach, Foley Hoag LLP, of 
Boston, Massachusetts. 
 
Joseph A. Keyes, Jr., Association of American Medical Colleges, of Washington, 
DC, for amicus curiae Association of American Medical Colleges.  
 
Nancy J. Linck, Rothwell, Figg, Ernst & Manbeck, of Washington, DC, for amicus 
curiae Biotechnology Industry Organization.  With her on the brief were Minaksi Bhatt and 
R. Elizabeth Brenner-Leifer.  Of counsel on the brief was Hans Sauer, Biotechnology 
Industry Organization, of Washington, DC. 
 
 
Erik P. Belt, Bromberg and Sunstein LLP, of Boston, Massachusetts, for amicus 
curiae Boston Patent Law Association.  With him on the brief were John J. Stickevers and 
Jakub M. Michna.  Of counsel on the brief were Robert M. Abrahamsen, Steven J. Henry, 
and Ilan N. Barzilay, Wolf, Greenfield and Sacks, P.C., of Boston, Massachusetts. 
 
 Andrew 
J. 
Pincus, Mayer Brown LLP, of Washington, DC, for amicus curiae The 
Business Software Alliance.  With him on the brief were Dan Himmelfarb and Brian D. 
Netter. 
 
 
Richard H. Stern, Kellogg, Huber, Hansen, Todd, Evans & Figel, P.L.L.C., of 
Washington, DC, for amicus curiae Center for Advanced Study and Research on 
Intellectual Property of the University of Washington School of Law. 
 
Dean Alderucci, CFPH, LLC, of New York, New York, for amicus curiae CFPH, LLC. 
 
Matthew Schruers, Computer & Communications Industry Association, of 
Washington, DC, for amicus curiae Computer & Communications Industry Association. 
 
Jason M. Schultz, University of California Berkeley School of Law, of Berkeley, 
California, for amici curiae Consumers Union, et al.  
 

 Carter 
G. 
Phillips, Sidley Austin LLP, of Washington, DC, for amici curiae Dell Inc., 
et al.  With him on the brief were Jeffrey P. Kushan, and Constantine L. Trela, Jr. and 
Richard A. Cederoth, of Chicago, Illinois. 
 
James J. Kelley, Eli Lilly and Company, of Indianapolis, Indiana, for amicus curiae 
Eli Lilly and Company.  With him on the brief were Robert A. Armitage and Alexander 
Wilson.   
 
 Jerry 
Cohen, Burns & Levinson, LLP, of Boston, Massachusetts, for amicus curiae 
End Software Patents. 
 
 
Michael J. Songer, Crowell & Moring, LLP, of Washington, DC, for amicus curiae 
Federal Circuit Bar Association.  Of counsel on the brief was Edward R. Reines, Federal  
Circuit Bar Association, of Washington, DC. 
 
 
Maxim H. Waldbaum, Schiff Hardin LLP, of New York, New York, for amicus curiae 
Fédération Internationale Des Conseils En Propriété Industrielle.  
 
 
Michael R. McCarthy, Parsons Behle & Latimer, of Salt Lake City, Utah, for amicus 
curiae Professor Lee A. Hollaar. 
 
 
Howard L. Speight, of Houston, Texas, for amicus curiae Houston Intellectual 
Property Law Association. 
 
Eric E. Bensen, Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker LLP, of New York, New York, for 
amicus curiae Intellectual Property Owners Association.  Of counsel on the brief were  
Robert P. Hayter and Steven W. Miller, Intellectual Property Owners Association, of 
Washington, DC.  Of counsel was Herbert C. Wamsley, Intellectual Property Owners 
Association, of Washington, DC.  
 
Christopher Landau, Kirkland & Ellis LLP, of Washington, DC, for amicus curiae 
International Business Machines Corporation.  With him on the brief were Gregory S. 
Arovas and Timothy K. Gilman, of New York, New York.  Of counsel on the brief were 
David J. Kappos, IBM Corporation, of Armonk, New York, and John R. Thomas, 
Georgetown University Law Center, of Washington, DC. 
 
 
Jack E. Haken, Philips Intellectual Property and Standards, of Briarcliff Manor, New 
York, for amicus curiae Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V.  With him on the brief was 
Todd Holmbo. 
 
 
Mark A. Lemley, Stanford Law School, of Stanford, California, for amici curiae law 
professors John R. Allison, et al.  Of counsel on the brief were Michael Risch, West 
Virginia University College of Law, of Morgantown, West Virginia, and R. Polk Wagner, 
University of Pennsylvania Law School, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 
 
Joshua D. Sarnoff, Washington College of Law, American University, of 
Washington, DC, for amici curiae law professors Ralph D. Clifford, et al.  

 
Todd L. Juneau, Juneau Partners Patent & Trademark Firm, PLLC, of Alexandria, 
Virginia, for amicus curiae Jason V. Morgan. 
 
 
James R. Myers, Ropes & Gray LLP, of Washington, DC, for amici curiae Pacific 
Life Insurance Company, et al.  With him on the brief was Brandon H. Stroy, of New York, 
New York. 
 
 Robert 
H. 
Tiller, Red Hat, Inc., of Raleigh, North Carolina, for amicus curiae Red 
Hat, Inc.  With him on the brief was Richard E. Fontana.  
 
 Charles 
R. 
Macedo, Amster, Rothstein & Ebenstein LLP, of New York, New York, 
for amici curiae Reserve Management Corporation, et al.  With him on the brief were 
Anthony F. Lo Cicero and Jung S. Hahm. 
 
 Katherine 
K. 
Lutton, Fish & Richardson P.C., of Redwood City, California, for 
amicus curiae SAP America, Inc.  With her on the brief were John A. Dragseth, of 
Minneapolis, Minnesota, and Christian A. Chu, of Washington, DC.  Of counsel on the brief 
were Kevin R. Hamel and Gerard Wissing, SAP America, Inc., of Newtown Square, 
Pennsylvania. 
 
 
Scott E. Bain, Software & Information Industry Association, of Washington, DC, for 
amicus curiae Software & Information Industry Association. 
 
Michael J. Swope, Woodcock Washburn LLP, of Seattle, Washington, for amicus 
curiae Washington State Patent Law Association.  With him on the brief was Grzegorz S. 
Plichta.  Of counsel on the brief were Peter J. Knudsen, Nastech Pharmaceutical Co., Inc., 
of Bothell, Washington, and Dale C. Barr, Washington State Patent Law Association, of 
Seattle, Washington. 
 
 
R. Carl Moy, William Mitchell College of Law, of St. Paul, Minnesota, for amicus 
curiae William Mitchell College of Law Intellectual Property Institute.  With him on the brief 
was Jay A. Erstling. 
 
 
Christopher J. Wright, Harris, Wiltshire & Grannis LLP, of Washington, DC, for amici 
curiae Yahoo! Inc., et al.  With him on the brief were Timothy J. Simeone and Joseph C. 
Cavender. 
 
 Gregory 
Aharonian, of San Francisco, California, as amicus curiae, pro se. 
 
 Kevin 
Emerson 
Collins, Indiana University School of Law, Bloomington, of 
Bloomington, Indiana, as amicus curiae, pro se. 
 
Roberta J. Morris, of Menlo Park, California, as amicus curiae, pro se. 
 
 
Appealed from:  
United States Patent and Trademark Office  
 
 
 
Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences 

United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit 
 
2007-1130 
(Serial No. 08/833,892) 
 
 
IN RE BERNARD L. BILSKI  
and RAND A. WARSAW 
 
 
 
Appeal from the United States Patent and Trademark Office, Board of Patent Appeals 
and Interferences. 
 
__________________________ 
 
DECIDED:  October 30, 2008 
__________________________ 
 
Before MICHEL, Chief Judge, NEWMAN, MAYER, LOURIE, RADER, SCHALL, 
BRYSON, GAJARSA, LINN, DYK, PROST, and MOORE, Circuit Judges. 
 
Opinion for the court filed by Chief Judge MICHEL, in which Circuit Judges LOURIE, 
SCHALL, BRYSON, GAJARSA, LINN, DYK, PROST, and MOORE join.  Concurring 
opinion filed by Circuit Judge DYK, in which Circuit Judge LINN joins.  Dissenting 
opinion filed by Circuit Judge NEWMAN.  Dissenting opinion filed by Circuit Judge 
MAYER.  Dissenting opinion filed by Circuit Judge RADER. 
 
MICHEL, Chief Judge. 
 
Bernard L. Bilski and Rand A. Warsaw (collectively, "Applicants") appeal from the 
final decision of the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences ("Board") sustaining the 
rejection of all eleven claims of their U.S. Patent Application Serial No. 08/833,892 
("′892 application").  See Ex parte Bilski, No. 2002-2257, 2006 WL 5738364 (B.P.A.I. 
Sept. 26, 2006) ("Board Decision").  Specifically, Applicants argue that the examiner 
erroneously rejected the claims as not directed to patent-eligible subject matter under 
35 U.S.C. § 101, and that the Board erred in upholding that rejection.  The appeal was 
originally argued before a panel of the court on October 1, 2007.  Prior to disposition by 
 
 

the panel, however, we sua sponte ordered en banc review.  Oral argument before the 
en banc court was held on May 8, 2008.  We affirm the decision of the Board because 
we conclude that Applicants' claims are not directed to patent-eligible subject matter, 
and in doing so, we clarify the standards applicable in determining whether a claimed 
method constitutes a statutory "process" under § 101. 
I. 
Applicants filed their patent application on April 10, 1997.  The application 
contains eleven claims, which Applicants argue together here.  Claim 1 reads: 
A method for managing the consumption risk costs of a commodity sold by 
a commodity provider at a fixed price comprising the steps of: 
(a) initiating a series of transactions between said commodity provider 
and consumers of said commodity wherein said consumers 
purchase said commodity at a fixed rate based upon historical 
averages, said fixed rate corresponding to a risk position of said 
consumer; 
(b) identifying market participants for said commodity having a counter-
risk position to said consumers; and 
(c) initiating a series of transactions between said commodity provider 
and said market participants at a second fixed rate such that said 
series of market participant transactions balances the risk position 
of said series of consumer transactions 
 
′892 application cl.1.  In essence, the claim is for a method of hedging risk in the field of 
commodities trading.  For example, coal power plants (i.e., the "consumers") purchase 
coal to produce electricity and are averse to the risk of a spike in demand for coal since 
such a spike would increase the price and their costs.  Conversely, coal mining 
companies (i.e., the "market participants") are averse to the risk of a sudden drop in 
demand for coal since such a drop would reduce their sales and depress prices.  The 
claimed method envisions an intermediary, the "commodity provider," that sells coal to 
2007-1130 2 

the power plants at a fixed price, thus isolating the power plants from the possibility of a 
spike in demand increasing the price of coal above the fixed price.  The same provider 
buys coal from mining companies at a second fixed price, thereby isolating the mining 
companies from the possibility that a drop in demand would lower prices below that 
fixed price.  And the provider has thus hedged its risk; if demand and prices skyrocket, it 
has sold coal at a disadvantageous price but has bought coal at an advantageous price, 
and vice versa if demand and prices fall.  Importantly, however, the claim is not limited 
to transactions involving actual commodities, and the application discloses that the 
recited transactions may simply involve options, i.e., rights to purchase or sell the 
commodity at a particular price within a particular timeframe.  See J.A. at 86-87. 
 
The examiner ultimately rejected claims 1-11 under 35 U.S.C. § 101, stating:  
"[r]egarding . . . claims 1-11, the invention is not implemented on a specific apparatus 
and merely manipulates [an] abstract idea and solves a purely mathematical problem 
without any limitation to a practical application, therefore, the invention is not directed to 
the technological arts."  See Board Decision, slip op. at 3.  The examiner noted that 
Applicants had admitted their claims are not limited to operation on a computer, and he 
concluded that they were not limited by any specific apparatus.  See id. at 4. 
On appeal, the Board held that the examiner erred to the extent he relied on a 
"technological arts" test because the case law does not support such a test.  Id. at 41-
42.  Further, the Board held that the requirement of a specific apparatus was also 
erroneous because a claim that does not recite a specific apparatus may still be 
directed to patent-eligible subject matter "if there is a transformation of physical subject 
matter from one state to another."  Id. at 42.  Elaborating further, the Board stated:  
2007-1130 3 

"'mixing' two elements or compounds to produce a chemical substance or mixture is 
clearly a statutory transformation although no apparatus is claimed to perform the step 
and although the step could be performed manually."  Id.  But the Board concluded that 
Applicants' claims do not involve any patent-eligible transformation, holding that 
transformation of "non-physical financial risks and legal liabilities of the commodity 
provider, the consumer, and the market participants" is not patent-eligible subject 
matter.  Id. at 43.  The Board also held that Applicants' claims "preempt[] any and every 
possible way of performing the steps of the [claimed process], by human or by any kind 
of machine or by any combination thereof," and thus concluded that they only claim an 
abstract idea ineligible for patent protection.  Id. at 46-47.  Finally, the Board held that 
Applicants' process as claimed did not produce a "useful, concrete and tangible result," 
and for this reason as well was not drawn to patent-eligible subject matter.  Id. at 49-50. 
Applicants timely appealed to this court under 35 U.S.C. § 141.  We have 
jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(4)(A). 
II. 
 
Whether a claim is drawn to patent-eligible subject matter under § 101 is a 
threshold inquiry, and any claim of an application failing the requirements of § 101 must 
be rejected even if it meets all of the other legal requirements of patentability.  In re 
Comiskey, 499 F.3d 1365, 1371 (Fed. Cir. 2007)1 (quoting Parker v. Flook, 437 U.S. 
                                            
1  
Although our decision in Comiskey may be misread by some as requiring 
in every case that the examiner conduct a § 101 analysis before assessing any other 
issue of patentability, we did not so hold.  As with any other patentability requirement, 
an examiner may reject a claim solely on the basis of § 101.  Or, if the examiner deems 
it appropriate, she may reject the claim on any other ground(s) without addressing         
§ 101.  But given that § 101 is a threshold requirement, claims that are clearly drawn to 
unpatentable subject matter should be identified and rejected on that basis.  Thus, an 
2007-1130 4 

584, 593 (1978)); In re Bergy, 596 F.2d 952, 960 (CCPA 1979), vacated as moot sub 
nom. Diamond v. Chakrabarty, 444 U.S. 1028 (1980).  Whether a claim is drawn to 
patent-eligible subject matter under § 101 is an issue of law that we review de novo.  
Comiskey, 499 F.3d at 1373; AT&T Corp. v. Excel Commc'ns, Inc., 172 F.3d 1352, 
1355 (Fed. Cir. 1998).  Although claim construction, which we also review de novo, is 
an important first step in a § 101 analysis, see State St. Bank & Trust Co. v. Signature 
Fin. Group, 149 F.3d 1368, 1370 (Fed. Cir. 1998) (noting that whether a claim is invalid 
under § 101 "is a matter of both claim construction and statutory construction"), there is 
no claim construction dispute in this appeal.  We review issues of statutory 
interpretation such as this one de novo as well.  Id. 
A. 
As this appeal turns on whether Applicants' invention as claimed meets the 
requirements set forth in § 101, we begin with the words of the statute: 
Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, 
manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful 
improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the 
conditions and requirements of this title. 
 
35 U.S.C. § 101.  The statute thus recites four categories of patent-eligible subject 
matter:  processes, machines, manufactures, and compositions of matter.  It is 
undisputed that Applicants' claims are not directed to a machine, manufacture, or 
composition of matter.2  Thus, the issue before us involves what the term "process" in  
                                                                                                                                             
examiner should generally first satisfy herself that the application's claims are drawn to 
patent-eligible subject matter. 
 
2  
As a result, we decline to discuss In re Nuijten because that decision 
primarily concerned whether a claim to an electronic signal was drawn to a patent-
eligible manufacture.  500 F.3d 1346, 1356-57 (Fed. Cir. 2007).  We note that the PTO 
2007-1130 5 

§ 101 means, and how to determine whether a given claim—and Applicants' claim 1 in 
particular—is a "new and useful process."
 
As several amici have argued, the term "process" is ordinarily broad in meaning, 
at least in general lay usage.  In 1952, at the time Congress amended § 101 to include 
"process,"4 the ordinary meaning of the term was:  "[a] procedure . . . [a] series of 
actions, motions, or operations definitely conducing to an end, whether voluntary or 
involuntary."  WEBSTER'S  NEW  INTERNATIONAL  DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH  LANGUAGE 
1972 (2d ed. 1952).  There can be no dispute that Applicants' claim would meet this 
definition of "process."  But the Supreme Court has held that the meaning of "process" 
as used in § 101 is narrower than its ordinary meaning.  See Flook, 437 U.S. at 588-89 
("The holding [in Benson] forecloses a purely literal reading of § 101.").  Specifically, the 
Court has held that a claim is not a patent-eligible "process" if it claims "laws of nature, 
natural phenomena, [or] abstract ideas."  Diamond v. Diehr, 450 U.S. 175, 185 (1981) 
(citing Flook, 437 U.S. at 589, and Gottschalk v. Benson, 409 U.S. 63, 67 (1972)).  Such 
                                                                                                                                             
did not dispute that the process claims in Nuijten were drawn to patent-eligible subject 
matter under § 101 and allowed those claims. 
 
3  
Congress provided a definition of "process" in 35 U.S.C. § 100(b):  "The 
term 'process' means process, art or method, and includes a new use of a known 
process, machine, manufacture, composition of matter, or material."  However, this 
provision is unhelpful given that the definition itself uses the term "process." 
4  
The Patent Act of 1793 originally used the term "art" rather than "process," 
which remained unchanged until Congress enacted the current version of § 101 in 
1952.  But the Supreme Court has held that this change did not alter the scope of patent 
eligibility over processes because "[i]n the language of the patent law, [a process] is an 
art."  Diamond v. Diehr, 450 U.S. 175, 182-84 (1981) (quoting Cochrane v. Deener, 94 
U.S. 780, 787-88 (1877)); see also Comiskey, 499 F.3d at 1375. 
2007-1130 6 

fundamental principles5 are "part of the storehouse of knowledge of all men . . . free to 
all men and reserved exclusively to none."  Funk Bros. Seed Co. v. Kalo Inoculant Co., 
333 U.S. 127, 130 (1948); see also Le Roy v. Tatham, 55 U.S. (14 How.) 156, 175 
(1852) ("A principle, in the abstract, is a fundamental truth; an original cause; a motive; 
these cannot be patented, as no one can claim in either of them an exclusive right.").  
"Phenomena of nature, though just discovered, mental processes, and abstract 
intellectual concepts are not patentable, as they are the basic tools of scientific and 
technological work."  Benson, 409 U.S. at 67; see also Comiskey, 499 F.3d at 1378-79 
(holding that "mental processes," "processes of human thinking," and "systems that 
depend for their operation on human intelligence alone" are not patent-eligible subject 
matter under Benson). 
 
The true issue before us then is whether Applicants are seeking to claim a 
fundamental principle (such as an abstract idea) or a mental process.  And the 
underlying legal question thus presented is what test or set of criteria governs the 
determination by the Patent and Trademark Office ("PTO") or courts as to whether a 
claim to a process is patentable under § 101 or, conversely, is drawn to unpatentable 
subject matter because it claims only a fundamental principle. 
The Supreme Court last addressed this issue in 1981 in Diehr, which concerned 
a patent application seeking to claim a process for producing cured synthetic rubber 
products.  450 U.S. at 177-79.  The claimed process took temperature readings during 
cure and used a mathematical algorithm, the Arrhenius equation, to calculate the time 
when curing would be complete.  Id.  Noting that a mathematical algorithm alone is 
                                            
5  
As used in this opinion, "fundamental principles" means "laws of nature, 
natural phenomena, and abstract ideas." 
2007-1130 7 

unpatentable because mathematical relationships are akin to a law of nature, the Court 
nevertheless held that the claimed process was patent-eligible subject matter, stating: 
[The inventors] do not seek to patent a mathematical formula.  Instead, 
they seek patent protection for a process of curing synthetic rubber. Their 
process admittedly employs a well-known mathematical equation, but they 
do not seek to pre-empt the use of that equation. Rather, they seek only to 
foreclose from others the use of that equation in conjunction with all of the 
other steps in their claimed process. 
 
Id. at 187 (emphasis added).6  The Court declared that while a claim drawn to a 
fundamental principle is unpatentable, "an application of a law of nature or mathematical 
formula to a known structure or process may well be deserving of patent protection."  Id. 
(emphasis in original); see also Mackay Radio & Tel. Co. v. Radio Corp. of Am., 306 
U.S. 86, 94 (1939) ("While a scientific truth, or the mathematical expression of it, is not a 
patentable invention, a novel and useful structure created with the aid of knowledge of 
scientific truth may be."). 
 
The Court in Diehr thus drew a distinction between those claims that "seek to 
pre-empt the use of" a fundamental principle, on the one hand, and claims that seek 
only to foreclose others from using a particular "application" of that fundamental 
principle, on the other.  450 U.S. at 187.  Patents, by definition, grant the power to 
exclude others from practicing that which the patent claims.  Diehr can be understood to 
suggest that whether a claim is drawn only to a fundamental principle is essentially an 
inquiry into the scope of that exclusion; i.e., whether the effect of allowing the claim 
                                            
6  
Mathematical algorithms have, in other cases, been identified instead as 
abstract ideas rather than laws of nature.  See, e.g., State St., 149 F.3d at 1373.  
Whether either or both views are correct is immaterial since both laws of nature and 
abstract ideas are unpatentable under § 101.  Diehr, 450 U.S. at 185. 
2007-1130 8 

would be to allow the patentee to pre-empt substantially all uses of that fundamental 
principle.  If so, the claim is not drawn to patent-eligible subject matter. 
 In 
Diehr, the Court held that the claims at issue did not pre-empt all uses of the 
Arrhenius equation but rather claimed only "a process for curing rubber . . . which 
incorporates in it a more efficient solution of the equation."  450 U.S. at 188.  The 
process as claimed included several specific steps to control the curing of rubber more 
precisely:  "These include installing rubber in a press, closing the mold, constantly 
determining the temperature of the mold, constantly recalculating the appropriate cure 
time through the use of the formula and a digital computer, and automatically opening 
the press at the proper time."  Id. at 187.  Thus, one would still be able to use the 
Arrhenius equation in any process not involving curing rubber, and more importantly, 
even in any process to cure rubber that did not include performing "all of the other steps 
in their claimed process."  See id.; see also Tilghman v. Proctor, 102 U.S. 707, 729 
(1880) (holding patentable a process of breaking down fat molecules into fatty acids and 
glycerine in water specifically requiring both high heat and high pressure since other 
processes, known or as yet unknown, using the reaction of water and fat molecules 
were not claimed). 
In contrast to Diehr, the earlier Benson case presented the Court with claims 
drawn to a process of converting data in binary-coded decimal ("BCD") format to pure 
binary format via an algorithm programmed onto a digital computer.  Benson, 409 U.S. 
at 65.  The Court held the claims to be drawn to unpatentable subject matter: 
It is conceded that one may not patent an idea.  But in practical effect that 
would be the result if the formula for converting BCD numerals to pure 
binary numerals were patented in this case.  The mathematical formula 
involved here has no substantial practical application except in connection 
2007-1130 9 

with a digital computer, which means that if the judgment below is 
affirmed, the patent would wholly pre-empt the mathematical formula and 
in practical effect would be a patent on the algorithm itself. 
 
Id. at 71-72 (emphasis added).  Because the algorithm had no uses other than those 
that would be covered by the claims (i.e., any conversion of BCD to pure binary on a 
digital computer), the claims pre-empted all uses of the algorithm and thus they were 
effectively drawn to the algorithm itself.  See also O'Reilly v. Morse, 56 U.S. (15 How.) 
62, 113 (1853) (holding ineligible a claim pre-empting all uses of electromagnetism to 
print characters at a distance). 
 
The question before us then is whether Applicants' claim recites a fundamental 
principle and, if so, whether it would pre-empt substantially all uses of that fundamental 
principle if allowed.  Unfortunately, this inquiry is hardly straightforward.  How does one 
determine whether a given claim would pre-empt all uses of a fundamental principle?  
Analogizing to the facts of Diehr or Benson is of limited usefulness because the more 
challenging process claims of the twenty-first century are seldom so clearly limited in 
scope as the highly specific, plainly corporeal industrial manufacturing process of Diehr; 
nor are they typically as broadly claimed or purely abstract and mathematical as the 
algorithm of Benson. 
 
The Supreme Court, however, has enunciated a definitive test to determine 
whether a process claim is tailored narrowly enough to encompass only a particular 
application of a fundamental principle rather than to pre-empt the principle itself.  A 
claimed process is surely patent-eligible under § 101 if:  (1) it is tied to a particular 
machine or apparatus, or (2) it transforms a particular article into a different state or 
thing.  See Benson, 409 U.S. at 70 ("Transformation and reduction of an article 'to a 
2007-1130 10 

different state or thing' is the clue to the patentability of a process claim that does not 
include particular machines."); Diehr, 450 U.S. at 192 (holding that use of mathematical 
formula in process "transforming or reducing an article to a different state or thing" 
constitutes patent-eligible subject matter); see also Flook, 437 U.S. at 589 n.9 ("An 
argument can be made [that the Supreme] Court has only recognized a process as 
within the statutory definition when it either was tied to a particular apparatus or 
operated to change materials to a 'different state or thing'"); Cochrane v. Deener, 94 
U.S. 780, 788 (1876) ("A process is . . . an act, or a series of acts, performed upon the 
subject-matter to be transformed and reduced to a different state or thing.").7  A claimed 
process involving a fundamental principle that uses a particular machine or apparatus 
would not pre-empt uses of the principle that do not also use the specified machine or 
apparatus in the manner claimed.  And a claimed process that transforms a particular 
article to a specified different state or thing by applying a fundamental principle would 
not pre-empt the use of the principle to transform any other article, to transform the 
same article but in a manner not covered by the claim, or to do anything other than 
transform the specified article. 
 
The process claimed in Diehr, for example, clearly met both criteria.  The process 
operated on a computerized rubber curing apparatus and transformed raw, uncured 
rubber into molded, cured rubber products.  Diehr, 450 U.S. at 184, 187.  The claim at 
issue in Flook, in contrast, was directed to using a particular mathematical formula to 
calculate an "alarm limit"—a value that would indicate an abnormal condition during an 
                                            
7  
While the Court did not give explicit definitions of terms such as "tied to," 
"transforms," or "article," a careful analysis of its opinions and the subsequent 
jurisprudence of this court applying those decisions, discussed infra, informs our 
understanding of the Court's machine-or-transformation test. 
2007-1130 11 

unspecified chemical reaction.  437 U.S. at 586.  The Court rejected the claim as drawn 
to the formula itself because the claim did not include any limitations specifying "how to 
select the appropriate margin of safety, the weighting factor, or any of the other 
variables . . . the chemical processes at work, the [mechanism for] monitoring of 
process variables, or the means of setting off an alarm or adjusting an alarm system."  
See id. at 586, 595.  The claim thus was not limited to any particular chemical (or other) 
transformation; nor was it tied to any specific machine or apparatus for any of its 
process steps, such as the selection or monitoring of variables or the setting off or 
adjusting of the alarm.8  See id. 
A canvas of earlier Supreme Court cases reveals that the results of those 
decisions were also consistent with the machine-or-transformation test later articulated 
in Benson and reaffirmed in Diehr.  See Tilghman, 102 U.S. at 729 (particular process 
of transforming fats into constituent compounds held patentable); Cochrane, 94 U.S. at 
785-88 (process transforming grain meal into purified flour held patentable); Morse, 56 
U.S. (15 How.) at 113 (process of using electromagnetism to print characters at a 
distance that was not transformative or tied to any particular apparatus held 
unpatentable).  Interestingly, Benson presents a difficult case under its own test in that 
the claimed process operated on a machine, a digital computer, but was still held to be 
                                            
8  
To the extent it may be argued that Flook did not explicitly follow the 
machine-or-transformation test first articulated in Benson, we note that the more recent 
decision in Diehr reaffirmed the machine-or-transformation test.  See Diehr, 450 U.S. at 
191-92.  Moreover, the Diehr Court explained that Flook "presented a similar situation" 
to Benson and considered it consistent with the holdings of Diehr and Benson.  Diehr at 
186-87, 189, 191-92.  We thus follow the Diehr Court's understanding of Flook. 
2007-1130 12 

ineligible subject matter.9  However, in Benson, the limitations tying the process to a 
computer were not actually limiting because the fundamental principle at issue, a 
particular algorithm, had no utility other than operating on a digital computer.  Benson, 
409 U.S. at 71-72.  Thus, the claim's tie to a digital computer did not reduce the pre-
emptive footprint of the claim since all uses of the algorithm were still covered by the 
claim. 
B. 
 
Applicants and several amici10 have argued that the Supreme Court did not 
intend the machine-or-transformation test to be the sole test governing § 101 analyses.  
As already noted, however, the Court explicitly stated in Benson that "[t]ransformation 
and reduction of an article 'to a different state or thing' is the clue to the patentability of a 
process claim that does not include particular machines."11  409 U.S. at 70 (emphasis 
added).  And the Court itself later noted in Flook that at least so far it had "only 
                                            
9  
We acknowledge that the Supreme Court in Benson stated that the claims 
at issue "were not limited . . . to any particular apparatus or machinery."  409 U.S. at 64.  
However, the Court immediately thereafter stated:  "[The claims] purported to cover any 
use of the claimed method in a general-purpose digital computer of any type."  Id.  And, 
as discussed herein, the Court relied for its holding on its understanding that the 
claimed process pre-empted all uses of the recited algorithm because its only possible 
use was on a digital computer.  Id. at 71-72.  The Diehr Court, in discussing Benson, 
relied only on this latter understanding of the Benson claims.  See Diehr, 450 U.S. at 
185-87.  We must do the same. 
 
10  
See, e.g., Br. of Amicus Curiae Am. Intellectual Prop. Law Ass'n at 17-21; 
Br. of Amicus Curiae Regulatory Datacorp, Inc. at 10-15. 
11 
  We believe that the Supreme Court spoke of the machine-or-
transformation test as the "clue" to patent-eligibility because the test is the tool used to 
determine whether a claim is drawn to a statutory "process"—the statute does not itself 
explicitly mention machine implementation or transformation.  We do not consider the 
word "clue" to indicate that the machine-or-implementation test is optional or merely 
advisory.  Rather, the Court described it as the clue, not merely "a" clue.  See Benson, 
409 U.S. at 70. 
2007-1130 13 

recognized a process as within the statutory definition when it either was tied to a 
particular apparatus or operated to change materials to a 'different state or thing.'"  437 
U.S. at 589 n.9.  Finally, the Court in Diehr once again applied the machine-or-
transformation test in its most recent decision regarding the patentability of processes 
under § 101.  450 U.S. at 184. 
 
We recognize, however, that the Court was initially equivocal in first putting 
forward this test in Benson.  As the Applicants and several amici point out, the Court 
there stated: 
It is argued that a process patent must either be tied to a particular 
machine or apparatus or must operate to change articles or materials to a 
'different state or thing.'  We do not hold that no process patent could ever 
qualify if it did not meet the requirements of our prior precedents. 
 
Benson, 409 U.S. at 71.  In Flook, the Court took note that this statement had been 
made in Benson but merely stated:  "As in Benson, we assume that a valid process 
patent may issue even if it does not meet [the machine-or-transformation test]."  437 
U.S. at 589 n.9 (emphasis added).  And this caveat was not repeated in Diehr when the 
Court reaffirmed the machine-or-transformation test.  See Diehr, 450 U.S. at 184 
(quoting Benson, 409 U.S. at 70) (“Transformation and reduction of an article ‘to a 
different state or thing’ is the clue to the patentability of a process claim that does not 
include particular machines.”).  Therefore, we believe our reliance on the Supreme 
Court's machine-or-transformation test as the applicable test for § 101 analyses of 
process claims is sound. 
 
Nevertheless, we agree that future developments in technology and the sciences 
may present difficult challenges to the machine-or-transformation test, just as the 
widespread use of computers and the advent of the Internet has begun to challenge it in 
2007-1130 14 

the past decade.  Thus, we recognize that the Supreme Court may ultimately decide to 
alter or perhaps even set aside this test to accommodate emerging technologies.  And 
we certainly do not rule out the possibility that this court may in the future refine or 
augment the test or how it is applied.  At present, however, and certainly for the present 
case, we see no need for such a departure and reaffirm that the machine-or-
transformation test, properly applied, is the governing test for determining patent 
eligibility of a process under § 101.12 
C. 
As a corollary, the Diehr Court also held that mere field-of-use limitations are 
generally insufficient to render an otherwise ineligible process claim patent-eligible.  See 
450 U.S. at 191-92 (noting that ineligibility under § 101 "cannot be circumvented by 
attempting to limit the use of the formula to a particular technological environment").  
We recognize that tension may be seen between this consideration and the Court's 
overall goal of preventing the wholesale pre-emption of fundamental principles.  Why 
not permit patentees to avoid overbroad pre-emption by limiting claim scope to 
particular fields of use?  This tension is resolved, however, by recalling the purpose 
behind the Supreme Court's discussion of pre-emption, namely that pre-emption is 
merely an indication that a claim seeks to cover a fundamental principle itself rather 
                                            
12  
The  Diehr Court stated:  "[W]hen a claim containing a mathematical 
formula implements or applies that formula in a structure or process which, when 
considered as a whole, is performing a function which the patent laws were designed to 
protect (e.g., transforming or reducing an article to a different state or thing), then the 
claim satisfies the requirements of § 101."  450 U.S at 192 (emphases added).  When 
read together with Benson and Flook, on which the Diehr Court firmly relied, we believe 
this statement is consistent with the machine-or-transformation test.  But as we noted in 
AT&T, language such as the use of "e.g." may indicate the Supreme Court's recognition 
that the machine-or-transformation test might require modification in the future.  See 
AT&T, 172 F.3d at 1358-59. 
2007-1130 15 

than only a specific application of that principle.  See id. at 187; Benson, 409 U.S. at 71-
72.  Pre-emption of all uses of a fundamental principle in all fields and pre-emption of all 
uses of the principle in only one field both indicate that the claim is not limited to a 
particular application of the principle.  See Diehr, 450 U.S. at 193 n.14 ("A mathematical 
formula in the abstract is nonstatutory subject matter regardless of whether the patent is 
intended to cover all uses of the formula or only limited uses.") (emphasis added).  In 
contrast, a claim that is tied to a particular machine or brings about a particular 
transformation of a particular article does not pre-empt all uses of a fundamental 
principle in any field but rather is limited to a particular use, a specific application.  
Therefore, it is not drawn to the principle in the abstract. 
The Diehr Court also reaffirmed a second corollary to the machine-or-
transformation test by stating that "insignificant postsolution activity will not transform an 
unpatentable principle into a patentable process."  Id. at 191-92; see also Flook, 437 
U.S. at 590 ("The notion that post-solution activity, no matter how conventional or 
obvious in itself, can transform an unpatentable principle into a patentable process 
exalts form over substance.").  The Court in Flook reasoned: 
A competent draftsman could attach some form of post-solution activity 
to almost any mathematical formula; the Pythagorean theorem would not 
have been patentable, or partially patentable, because a patent 
application contained a final step indicating that the formula, when 
solved, could be usefully applied to existing surveying techniques. 
 
437 U.S. at 590.13  Therefore, even if a claim recites a specific machine or a particular 
transformation of a specific article, the recited machine or transformation must not 
                                            
13  
The example of the Pythagorean theorem applied to surveying techniques 
could also be considered an example of a mere field-of-use limitation. 
2007-1130 16 

constitute mere "insignificant postsolution activity."14 
D. 
We discern two other important aspects of the Supreme Court's § 101 
jurisprudence.  First, the Court has held that whether a claimed process is novel or non-
obvious is irrelevant to the § 101 analysis.  Diehr, 450 U.S. at 188-91.  Rather, such 
considerations are governed by 35 U.S.C. § 102 (novelty) and § 103 (non-obviousness).  
Diehr, 450 U.S. at 188-91.  Although § 101 refers to "new and useful" processes, it is 
overall "a general statement of the type of subject matter that is eligible for patent 
protection 'subject to the conditions and requirements of this title.'"  Diehr, 450 U.S. at 
189 (quoting § 101).  As the legislative history of § 101 indicates, Congress did not 
intend the "new and useful" language of § 101 to constitute an independent requirement 
of novelty or non-obviousness distinct from the more specific and detailed requirements 
of §§ 102 and 103, respectively.  Diehr, 450 U.S. at 190-91.15  So here, it is irrelevant to 
the § 101 analysis whether Applicants' claimed process is novel or non-obvious. 
Second, the Court has made clear that it is inappropriate to determine the patent-
eligibility of a claim as a whole based on whether selected limitations constitute patent-
                                            
14  
Although the Court spoke of "postsolution" activity, we have recognized 
that the Court's reasoning is equally applicable to any insignificant extra-solution activity 
regardless of where and when it appears in the claimed process.  See In re Schrader, 
22 F.3d 290, 294 (Fed. Cir. 1994) (holding a simple recordation step in the middle of the 
claimed process incapable of imparting patent-eligibility under § 101); In re Grams, 888 
F.2d 835, 839-40 (Fed. Cir. 1989) (holding a pre-solution step of gathering data 
incapable of imparting patent-eligibility under § 101). 
 
15   By the same token, considerations of adequate written description, 
enablement, best mode, etc., are also irrelevant to the § 101 analysis because they, 
too, are governed by other provisions of the Patent Act.  Section 101 does, however, 
allow for patents only on useful inventions.  Brenner v. Manson, 383 U.S. 519, 532-35 
(1966). 
2007-1130 17 

eligible subject matter.  Flook, 437 U.S. at 594 ("Our approach to respondent's 
application is, however, not at all inconsistent with the view that a patent claim must be 
considered as a whole."); Diehr, 450 U.S. at 188 ("It is inappropriate to dissect the 
claims into old and new elements and then to ignore the presence of the old elements in 
the analysis.").  After all, even though a fundamental principle itself is not patent-eligible, 
processes incorporating a fundamental principle may be patent-eligible.  Thus, it is 
irrelevant that any individual step or limitation of such processes by itself would be 
unpatentable under § 101.  See In re Alappat, 33 F.3d 1526, 1543-44 (Fed. Cir. 1994) 
(en banc) (citing Diehr, 450 U.S. at 187). 
III. 
In the years following the Supreme Court's decisions in Benson, Flook, and 
Diehr, our predecessor court and this court have reviewed numerous cases presenting 
a wide variety of process claims, some in technology areas unimaginable when those 
seminal Supreme Court cases were heard.16  Looking to these precedents, we find a 
wealth of detailed guidance and helpful examples on how to determine the patent-
eligibility of process claims. 
A. 
Before we turn to our precedents, however, we first address the issue of whether 
several other purported articulations of § 101 tests are valid and useful.  The first of 
these is known as the Freeman-Walter-Abele test after the three decisions of our 
predecessor court that formulated and then refined the test:  In re Freeman, 573 F.2d 
                                            
16  
We note that the PTO, too, has been active in analyzing § 101 law.  See, 
e.g., Ex parte Lundgren, 76 USPQ2d 1385 (B.P.A.I. 2004); Interim Guidelines for 
Examination of Patent Applications for Patent Subject Matter Eligibility, Off. Gaz. Pat. & 
Trademark Office, Nov. 22, 2005. 
2007-1130 18 

1237 (CCPA 1978); In re Walter, 618 F.2d 758 (CCPA 1980); and In re Abele, 684 F.2d 
902 (CCPA 1982).  This test, in its final form, had two steps:  (1) determining whether 
the claim recites an "algorithm" within the meaning of Benson, then (2) determining 
whether that algorithm is "applied in any manner to physical elements or process steps."  
Abele, 684 F.2d at 905-07. 
Some may question the continued viability of this test, arguing that it appears to 
conflict with the Supreme Court's proscription against dissecting a claim and evaluating 
patent-eligibility on the basis of individual limitations.  See Flook, 437 U.S. at 594 
(requiring analysis of claim as a whole in § 101 analysis); see also AT&T, 172 F.3d at 
1359; State St., 149 F.3d at 1374.  In light of the present opinion, we conclude that the 
Freeman-Walter-Abele test is inadequate.  Indeed, we have already recognized that a 
claim failing that test may nonetheless be patent-eligible.  See In re Grams, 888 F.2d 
835, 838-39 (Fed. Cir. 1989).  Rather, the machine-or-transformation test is the 
applicable test for patent-eligible subject matter.17 
The second articulation we now revisit is the "useful, concrete, and tangible 
result" language associated with State Street, although first set forth in Alappat.  State 
St., 149 F.3d at 1373 ("Today, we hold that the transformation of data, representing 
discrete dollar amounts, by a machine through a series of mathematical calculations 
into a final share price, constitutes a [patent-eligible invention] because it produces 'a 
useful, concrete and tangible result' . . . .");18 Alappat, 33 F.3d at 1544 ("This is not a 
                                            
17  
Therefore, in Abele, Meyer, Grams, Arrhythmia Research Technology, Inc. 
v. Corazonix Corp., 958 F.2d 1053 (Fed. Cir. 1992), and other decisions, those portions 
relying solely on the Freeman-Walter-Abele test should no longer be relied on. 
18  
In State Street, as is often forgotten, we addressed a claim drawn not to a 
process but to a machine.  149 F.3d at 1371-72 (holding that the means-plus-function 
2007-1130 19 

disembodied mathematical concept which may be characterized as an 'abstract idea,' 
but rather a specific machine to produce a useful, concrete, and tangible result."); see 
also AT&T, 172 F.3d at 1357 ("Because the claimed process applies the Boolean 
principle to produce a useful, concrete, tangible result without pre-empting other uses of 
the mathematical principle, on its face the claimed process comfortably falls within the 
scope of § 101.").  The basis for this language in State Street and Alappat was that the 
Supreme Court has explained that "certain types of mathematical subject matter, 
standing alone, represent nothing more than abstract ideas until reduced to some type 
of practical application."  Alappat, 33 F.3d at 1543; see also State St., 149 F.3d at 1373.  
To be sure, a process tied to a particular machine, or transforming or reducing a 
particular article into a different state or thing, will generally produce a "concrete" and 
"tangible" result as those terms were used in our prior decisions.  But while looking for 
"a useful, concrete and tangible result" may in many instances provide useful 
indications of whether a claim is drawn to a fundamental principle or a practical 
application of such a principle, that inquiry is insufficient to determine whether a claim is 
patent-eligible under § 101.  And it was certainly never intended to supplant the 
Supreme Court's test.  Therefore, we also conclude that the "useful, concrete and 
tangible result" inquiry is inadequate and reaffirm that the machine-or-transformation 
test outlined by the Supreme Court is the proper test to apply.19 
                                                                                                                                             
elements of the claims on appeal all corresponded to supporting structures disclosed in 
the written description). 
 
19  
As a result, those portions of our opinions in State Street and AT&T 
relying solely on a "useful, concrete and tangible result" analysis should no longer be 
relied on. 
2007-1130 20 

We next turn to the so-called "technological arts test" that some amici20 urge us 
to adopt.  We perceive that the contours of such a test, however, would be unclear 
because the meanings of the terms "technological arts" and "technology" are both 
ambiguous and ever-changing.21  And no such test has ever been explicitly adopted by 
the Supreme Court, this court, or our predecessor court, as the Board correctly 
observed here.  Therefore, we decline to do so and continue to rely on the machine-or-
transformation test as articulated by the Supreme Court. 
We further reject calls for categorical exclusions beyond those for fundamental 
principles already identified by the Supreme Court.22  We rejected just such an 
exclusion in State Street, noting that the so-called "business method exception" was 
unlawful and that business method claims (and indeed all process claims) are "subject 
to the same legal requirements for patentability as applied to any other process or 
method."  149 F.3d at 1375-76.  We reaffirm this conclusion.23 
                                            
20  
See,  e.g., Br. of Amicus Curiae Consumers Union et al. at 6-10; Br. of 
Amicus Curiae William Mitchell Coll. of Law Intellectual Prop. Inst. at 14-15. 
21  
Compare Appellee's Br. at 24-28 (arguing that patents should be reserved 
only for "technological" inventions that "involve[] the application of science or 
mathematics," thereby excluding "non-technological inventions" such as "activities 
whose ability to achieve their claimed goals depended solely on contract formation"), 
with Br. of Amicus Curiae Regulatory Datacorp, Inc. at 19-24 (arguing that "innovations 
in business, finance, and other applied economic fields plainly qualify as 'technological'" 
since "a fair definition of technological is 'characterized by the practical application of 
knowledge in a particular field'" and because modern economics has "a closer affinity to 
physics and engineering than to liberal arts like English literature"). 
22  
See,  e.g., Br. of Amicus Curiae Fin. Servs. Indus. at 20 ("[E]xtending 
patent protection to pure methods of doing business . . . is contrary to the constitutional 
and statutory basis for granting patent monopolies . . . ."). 
23  
Therefore, although invited to do so by several amici, we decline to adopt 
a broad exclusion over software or any other such category of subject matter beyond 
the exclusion of claims drawn to fundamental principles set forth by the Supreme Court.  
2007-1130 21 

Lastly, we address a possible misunderstanding of our decision in Comiskey.  
Some may suggest that Comiskey implicitly applied a new § 101 test that bars any 
claim reciting a mental process that lacks significant "physical steps."  We did not so 
hold, nor did we announce any new test at all in Comiskey.  Rather, we simply 
recognized that the Supreme Court has held that mental processes, like fundamental 
principles, are excluded by § 101 because "'[p]henomena of nature, though just 
discovered, mental processes, and abstract intellectual concepts . . . are the basic tools 
of scientific and technological work.'"  Comiskey, 499 F.3d at 1377 (quoting Benson, 
409 U.S. at 67) (emphasis added).  And we actually applied the machine-or-
transformation test to determine whether various claims at issue were drawn to patent-
eligible subject matter.24  Id. at 1379 ("Comiskey has conceded that these claims do not 
require a machine, and these claims evidently do not describe a process of manufacture 
or a process for the alteration of a composition of matter.").  Because those claims failed 
the machine-or-transformation test, we held that they were drawn solely to a 
fundamental principle, the mental process of arbitrating a dispute, and were thus not 
patent-eligible under § 101.  Id. 
                                                                                                                                             
See, e.g., Br. of Amicus Curiae End Software Patents; Br. of Amicus Curiae Red Hat, 
Inc. at 4-7.  We also note that the process claim at issue in this appeal is not, in any 
event, a software claim.  Thus, the facts here would be largely unhelpful in illuminating 
the distinctions between those software claims that are patent-eligible and those that 
are not. 
 
24  
Our statement in Comiskey that "a claim reciting an algorithm or abstract 
idea can state statutory subject matter only if, as employed in the process, it is 
embodied in, operates on, transforms, or otherwise involves another class of statutory 
subject matter, i.e., a machine, manufacture, or composition of matter," 499 F.3d at 
1376, was simply a summarization of the Supreme Court's machine-or-transformation 
test and should not be understood as altering that test. 
2007-1130 22 

Further, not only did we not rely on a "physical steps" test in Comiskey, but we 
have criticized such an approach to the § 101 analysis in earlier decisions.  In AT&T, we 
rejected a "physical limitations" test and noted that "the mere fact that a claimed 
invention involves inputting numbers, calculating numbers, outputting numbers, and 
storing numbers, in and of itself, would not render it nonstatutory subject matter."  172 
F.3d at 1359 (quoting State St., 149 F.3d at 1374).  The same reasoning applies when 
the claim at issue recites fundamental principles other than mathematical algorithms.  
Thus, the proper inquiry under § 101 is not whether the process claim recites sufficient 
"physical steps," but rather whether the claim meets the machine-or-transformation 
test.25  As a result, even a claim that recites "physical steps" but neither recites a 
particular machine or apparatus, nor transforms any article into a different state or thing, 
is not drawn to patent-eligible subject matter.  Conversely, a claim that purportedly lacks 
any "physical steps" but is still tied to a machine or achieves an eligible transformation 
passes muster under § 101.26 
B. 
With these preliminary issues resolved, we now turn to how our case law 
elaborates on the § 101 analysis set forth by the Supreme Court.  To the extent that 
some of the reasoning in these decisions relied on considerations or tests, such as 
"useful, concrete and tangible result," that are no longer valid as explained above, those 
aspects of the decisions should no longer be relied on.  Thus, we reexamine the facts of 
                                            
25  
Thus, it is simply inapposite to the § 101 analysis whether process steps 
performed by software on a computer are sufficiently "physical." 
26  
Of course, a claimed process wherein all of the process steps may be 
performed entirely in the human mind is obviously not tied to any machine and does not 
transform any article into a different state or thing.  As a result, it would not be patent-
eligible under § 101. 
2007-1130 23 

certain cases under the correct test to glean greater guidance as to how to perform the 
§ 101 analysis using the machine-or-transformation test. 
The machine-or-transformation test is a two-branched inquiry; an applicant may 
show that a process claim satisfies § 101 either by showing that his claim is tied to a 
particular machine, or by showing that his claim transforms an article.  See Benson, 409 
U.S. at 70.  Certain considerations are applicable to analysis under either branch.  First, 
as illustrated by Benson and discussed below, the use of a specific machine or 
transformation of an article must impose meaningful limits on the claim's scope to impart 
patent-eligibility.  See Benson, 409 U.S. at 71-72.  Second, the involvement of the 
machine or transformation in the claimed process must not merely be insignificant extra-
solution activity.  See Flook, 437 U.S. at 590.   
As to machine implementation, Applicants themselves admit that the language of 
claim 1 does not limit any process step to any specific machine or apparatus.  See 
Appellants' Br. at 11.  As a result, issues specific to the machine implementation part of 
the test are not before us today.  We leave to future cases the elaboration of the precise 
contours of machine implementation, as well as the answers to particular questions, 
such as whether or when recitation of a computer suffices to tie a process claim to a 
particular machine.   
We will, however, consider some of our past cases to gain insight into the 
transformation part of the test.  A claimed process is patent-eligible if it transforms an 
article into a different state or thing.  This transformation must be central to the purpose 
of the claimed process.  But the main aspect of the transformation test that requires 
clarification here is what sorts of things constitute "articles" such that their 
2007-1130 24 

transformation is sufficient to impart patent-eligibility under § 101.  It is virtually self-
evident that a process for a chemical or physical transformation of physical objects or 
substances is patent-eligible subject matter.  As the Supreme Court stated in Benson: 
[T]he arts of tanning, dyeing, making waterproof cloth, vulcanizing India 
rubber, smelting ores . . . are instances, however, where the use of 
chemical substances or physical acts, such as temperature control, 
changes articles or materials.  The chemical process or the physical acts 
which transform the raw material are, however, sufficiently definite to 
confine the patent monopoly within rather definite bounds. 
 
409 U.S. at 70 (quoting Corning v. Burden, 56 U.S. (15 How.) 252, 267-68 (1854)); see 
also Diehr, 450 U.S. at 184 (process of curing rubber); Tilghman, 102 U.S. at 729 
(process of reducing fats into constituent acids and glycerine). 
The raw materials of many information-age processes, however, are electronic 
signals and electronically-manipulated data.  And some so-called business methods, 
such as that claimed in the present case, involve the manipulation of even more 
abstract constructs such as legal obligations, organizational relationships, and business 
risks.  Which, if any, of these processes qualify as a transformation or reduction of an 
article into a different state or thing constituting patent-eligible subject matter? 
Our case law has taken a measured approach to this question, and we see no 
reason here to expand the boundaries of what constitutes patent-eligible 
transformations of articles.   
Our predecessor court's mixed result in Abele illustrates this point.  There, we 
held unpatentable a broad independent claim reciting a process of graphically 
displaying variances of data from average values.  Abele, 684 F.2d at 909.  That claim 
did not specify any particular type or nature of data; nor did it specify how or from where 
the data was obtained or what the data represented.  Id.; see also In re Meyer, 688 F.2d 
2007-1130 25 

789, 792-93 (CCPA 1982) (process claim involving undefined "complex system" and 
indeterminate "factors" drawn from unspecified "testing" not patent-eligible).  In contrast, 
we held one of Abele's dependent claims to be drawn to patent-eligible subject matter 
where it specified that "said data is X-ray attenuation data produced in a two 
dimensional field by a computed tomography scanner."  Abele, 684 F.2d at 908-09.  
This data clearly represented physical and tangible objects, namely the structure of 
bones, organs, and other body tissues.  Thus, the transformation of that raw data into a 
particular visual depiction of a physical object on a display was sufficient to render that 
more narrowly-claimed process patent-eligible. 
We further note for clarity that the electronic transformation of the data itself into 
a visual depiction in Abele was sufficient; the claim was not required to involve any 
transformation of the underlying physical object that the data represented.  We believe 
this is faithful to the concern the Supreme Court articulated as the basis for the 
machine-or-transformation test, namely the prevention of pre-emption of fundamental 
principles.  So long as the claimed process is limited to a practical application of a 
fundamental principle to transform specific data, and the claim is limited to a visual 
depiction that represents specific physical objects or substances, there is no danger that 
the scope of the claim would wholly pre-empt all uses of the principle. 
This court and our predecessor court have frequently stated that adding a data-
gathering step to an algorithm is insufficient to convert that algorithm into a patent-
eligible process.  E.g., Grams, 888 F.2d at 840 (step of "deriv[ing] data for the algorithm 
will not render the claim statutory"); Meyer, 688 F.2d at 794 (“[data-gathering] step[s] 
cannot make an otherwise nonstatutory claim statutory”).  For example, in Grams we 
2007-1130 26 

held unpatentable a process of performing a clinical test and, based on the data from 
that test, determining if an abnormality existed and possible causes of any abnormality.  
888 F.2d at 837, 841.  We rejected the claim because it was merely an algorithm 
combined with a data-gathering step.  Id. at 839-41.  We note that, at least in most 
cases, gathering data would not constitute a transformation of any article.  A 
requirement simply that data inputs be gathered—without specifying how—is a 
meaningless limit on a claim to an algorithm because every algorithm inherently 
requires the gathering of data inputs.  Grams, 888 F.2d at 839-40.  Further, the inherent 
step of gathering data can also fairly be characterized as insignificant extra-solution 
activity.  See Flook, 437 U.S. at 590. 
Similarly, In re Schrader presented claims directed to a method of conducting an 
auction of multiple items in which the winning bids were selected in a manner that 
maximized the total price of all the items (rather than to the highest individual bid for 
each item separately).  22 F.3d 290, 291 (Fed. Cir. 1994).  We held the claims to be 
drawn to unpatentable subject matter, namely a mathematical optimization algorithm.  
Id. at 293-94.  No specific machine or apparatus was recited.  The claimed method did 
require a step of recording the bids on each item, though no particular manner of 
recording (e.g., on paper, on a computer) was specified.  Id.  But, relying on Flook, we 
held that this step constituted insignificant extra-solution activity.  Id. at 294.   
IV. 
 
We now turn to the facts of this case.  As outlined above, the operative question 
before this court is whether Applicants' claim 1 satisfies the transformation branch of the 
machine-or-transformation test.   
2007-1130 27 

 
We hold that the Applicants' process as claimed does not transform any article to 
a different state or thing.  Purported transformations or manipulations simply of public or 
private legal obligations or relationships, business risks, or other such abstractions 
cannot meet the test because they are not physical objects or substances, and they are 
not representative of physical objects or substances.  Applicants' process at most 
incorporates only such ineligible transformations.  See Appellants' Br. at 11 ("[The 
claimed process] transforms the relationships between the commodity provider, the 
consumers and market participants . . . .").  As discussed earlier, the process as 
claimed encompasses the exchange of only options, which are simply legal rights to 
purchase some commodity at a given price in a given time period.  See J.A. at 86-87.  
The claim only refers to "transactions" involving the exchange of these legal rights at a 
"fixed rate corresponding to a risk position."  See ′892 application cl.1.  Thus, claim 1 
does not involve the transformation of any physical object or substance, or an electronic 
signal representative of any physical object or substance.  Given its admitted failure to 
meet the machine implementation part of the test as well, the claim entirely fails the 
machine-or-transformation test and is not drawn to patent-eligible subject matter. 
 
Applicants' arguments are unavailing because they rely on incorrect or 
insufficient considerations and do not address their claim's failure to meet the 
requirements of the Supreme Court's machine-or-transformation test.  First, they argue 
that claim 1 produces "useful, concrete and tangible results."  But as already discussed, 
this is insufficient to establish patent-eligibility under § 101.  Applicants also argue that 
their claimed process does not comprise only "steps that are totally or substantially 
practiced in the mind but clearly require physical activity which have [sic] a tangible 
2007-1130 28 

result."  Appellants' Br. at 9.  But as previously discussed, the correct analysis is 
whether the claim meets the machine-or-transformation test, not whether it recites 
"physical steps."  Even if it is true that Applicant's claim "can only be practiced by a 
series of physical acts" as they argue, see id. at 9, its clear failure to satisfy the 
machine-or-transformation test is fatal.  Thus, while we agree with Applicants that the 
only limit to patent-eligibility imposed by Congress is that the invention fall within one of 
the four categories enumerated in § 101, we must apply the Supreme Court's test to 
determine whether a claim to a process is drawn to a statutory "process" within the 
meaning of § 101.  Applied here, Applicants' claim fails that test so it is not drawn to a 
"process" under § 101 as that term has been interpreted. 
 
On the other hand, while we agree with the PTO that the machine-or-
transformation test is the correct test to apply in determining whether a process claim is 
patent-eligible under § 101, we do not agree, as discussed earlier, that this amounts to 
a "technological arts" test.  See Appellee's Br. at 24-28.  Neither the PTO nor the courts 
may pay short shrift to the machine-or-transformation test by using purported 
equivalents or shortcuts such as a "technological arts" requirement.  Rather, the 
machine-or-transformation test is the only applicable test and must be applied, in light of 
the guidance provided by the Supreme Court and this court, when evaluating the 
patent-eligibility of process claims.  When we do so here, however, we must conclude, 
as the PTO did, that Applicants' claim fails the test. 
 
Applicants' claim is similar to the claims we held unpatentable under § 101 in 
Comiskey.  There, the applicant claimed a process for mandatory arbitration of disputes 
regarding unilateral documents and bilateral "contractual" documents in which 
2007-1130 29 

arbitration was required by the language of the document, a dispute regarding the 
document was arbitrated, and a binding decision resulted from the arbitration.  
Comiskey, 499 F.3d at 1368-69.  We held the broadest process claims unpatentable 
under § 101 because "these claims do not require a machine, and these claims 
evidently do not describe a process of manufacture or a process for the alteration of a 
composition of matter."  Id. at 1379.  We concluded that the claims were instead drawn 
to the "mental process" of arbitrating disputes, and that claims to such an "application of 
[only] human intelligence to the solution of practical problems" is no more than a claim 
to a fundamental principle.  Id. at 1377-79 (quoting Benson, 409 U.S. at 67 ("[M]ental 
processes, and abstract intellectual concepts are not patentable, as they are the basic 
tools of scientific and technological work.")). 
 
Just as the Comiskey claims as a whole were directed to the mental process of 
arbitrating a dispute to decide its resolution, the claimed process here as a whole is 
directed to the mental and mathematical process of identifying transactions that would 
hedge risk.  The fact that the claim requires the identified transactions actually to be 
made does no more to alter the character of the claim as a whole than the fact that the 
claims in Comiskey required a decision to actually be rendered in the arbitration—i.e., in 
neither case do the claims require the use of any particular machine or achieve any 
eligible transformation. 
We have in fact consistently rejected claims like those in the present appeal and 
in Comiskey.  For example, in Meyer, the applicant sought to patent a method of 
diagnosing the location of a malfunction in an unspecified multi-component system that 
assigned a numerical value, a "factor," to each component and updated that value 
2007-1130 30 

based on diagnostic tests of each component.  688 F.2d at 792-93.  The locations of 
any malfunctions could thus be deduced from reviewing these "factors."  The diagnostic 
tests were not identified, and the "factors" were not tied to any particular measurement; 
indeed they could be arbitrary.  Id. at 790.  We held that the claim was effectively drawn 
only to "a mathematical algorithm representing a mental process," and we affirmed the 
PTO's rejection on § 101 grounds.  Id. at 796.  No machine was recited in the claim, and 
the only potential "transformation" was of the disembodied "factors" from one number to 
another.  Thus, the claim effectively sought to pre-empt the fundamental mental process 
of diagnosing the location of a malfunction in a system by noticing that the condition of a 
particular component had changed.  And as discussed earlier, a similar claim was 
rejected in Grams.27  See 888 F.2d at 839-40 (rejecting claim to process of diagnosing 
"abnormal condition" in person by identifying and noticing discrepancies in results of 
unspecified clinical tests of different parts of body). 
Similarly to the situations in Meyer and Grams, Applicants here seek to claim a 
non-transformative process that encompasses a purely mental process of performing 
requisite mathematical calculations without the aid of a computer or any other device, 
mentally identifying those transactions that the calculations have revealed would hedge 
each other's risks, and performing the post-solution step of consummating those 
transactions.  Therefore, claim 1 would effectively pre-empt any application of the 
                                            
27  
We note that several Justices of the Supreme Court, in a dissent to a 
dismissal of a writ of certiorari, expressed their view that a similar claim in Laboratory 
Corp. of America Holdings v. Metabolite Laboratories, Inc. was drawn to unpatentable 
subject matter.  126 S. Ct. 2921, 2927-28 (2006) (Breyer, J., dissenting; joined by 
Stevens, J., and Souter, J.).  There, the claimed process only comprised the steps of:  
(1) "assaying a body fluid for an elevated level of total homocysteine," and 
(2) "correlating an elevated level of total homocysteine in said body fluid with a 
deficiency of cobalamin or folate."  Id. at 2924. 
2007-1130 31 

fundamental concept of hedging and mathematical calculations inherent in hedging (not 
even limited to any particular mathematical formula).  And while Applicants argue that 
the scope of this pre-emption is limited to hedging as applied in the area of consumable 
commodities, the Supreme Court's reasoning has made clear that effective pre-emption 
of all applications of hedging even just within the area of consumable commodities is 
impermissible.  See Diehr, 450 U.S. at 191-92 (holding that field-of-use limitations are 
insufficient to impart patent-eligibility to otherwise unpatentable claims drawn to 
fundamental principles).  Moreover, while the claimed process contains physical steps 
(initiating, identifying), it does not involve transforming an article into a different state or 
thing.  Therefore, Applicants' claim is not drawn to patent-eligible subject matter under 
§ 101. 
CONCLUSION 
Because the applicable test to determine whether a claim is drawn to a patent-
eligible process under § 101 is the machine-or-transformation test set forth by the 
Supreme Court and clarified herein, and Applicants' claim here plainly fails that test, the 
decision of the Board is 
AFFIRMED. 
2007-1130 32 

 
 
   
 
 
 
 
United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
2007-1130 
(Serial No. 08/833,892) 
 
 
IN RE BERNARD L. BILSKI  
and RAND A. WARSAW 
 
 
Appeal from the United States Patent and Trademark Office, Board of Patent Appeals 
and Interferences. 
 
 
DYK, Circuit Judge, with whom LINN, Circuit Judge, joins, concurring. 
 
While I fully join the majority opinion, I write separately to respond to the claim in 
the two dissents that the majority’s opinion is not grounded in the statute, but rather 
“usurps the legislative role.”1  In fact, the unpatentability of processes not involving 
manufactures, machines, or compositions of matter has been firmly embedded in the 
statute since the time of the Patent Act of 1793, ch. 11, 1 Stat. 318 (1793).  It is our 
dissenting colleagues who would legislate by expanding patentable subject matter far 
beyond what is allowed by the statute. 

Section 101 now provides: 
Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, 
machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful 
improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the 
conditions and requirements of this title. 
 
                                            
1 The dissents fault the majority for “ventur[ing] away from the statute,” Rader, J., 
dissenting op. at 6, and “usurp[ing] the legislative role,” Newman, J., dissenting op. at 
41. 
 

35 U.S.C. § 101 (emphases added).   
The current version of § 101 can be traced back to the Patent Act of 1793.  In 
relevant part, the 1793 Act stated that a patent may be granted to any person or 
persons who: 
shall allege that he or they have invented any new and useful art, 
machine, manufacture or composition of matter, or any new and useful 
improvement on any art, machine, manufacture or composition of 
matter . . . . 
 
1 Stat. 318, 319 § 1 (1793) (emphases added).  The criteria for patentability established 
by the 1793 Act remained essentially unchanged until 1952, when Congress amended 
§ 101 by replacing the word “art” with “process” and providing in § 100(b) a definition of 
the term “process.”  The Supreme Court has made clear that this change did not alter 
the substantive understanding of the statute; it did not broaden the scope of patentable 
subject matter.2  Thus, our interpretation of § 101 must begin with a consideration of 
what the drafters of the early patent statutes understood the patentability standard to 
require in 1793.  See Diehr, 450 U.S. at 182-83 (looking to the 1793 Act). 

The patentability criteria of the 1793 Act were to a significant extent the same in 
the 1790 Act.3  The 1790 “statute was largely based on and incorporated” features of 
                                            
2  
See Diamond v. Diehr, 450 U.S. 175, 182 (1981) (“[A] process has 
historically enjoyed patent protection because it was considered a form of ‘art’ as that 
term was used in the 1793 Act.”); Diamond v. Chakrabarty, 447 U.S. 303, 309 (1980).  
Rather, the 1952 Act simply affirmed the prior judicial understanding, as set forth in 
Corning v. Burden, 56 U.S. (15 How.) 252 (1853), that Congress in 1793 had provided 
for the patentability of a “process” under the term “art.”  Diehr, 450 U.S. at 182.  
3  
In relevant part, the 1790 Act permitted patents upon “any useful art, 
manufacture, engine, machine, or device, or any improvement therein not before known 
or used.”  Ch. 11, § 1, 1 Stat. 109, 110 (1790). 
 
2007-1130 2 
 

the English system and reveals a sophisticated knowledge of the English patent law and 
practice.4  This is reflected in Senate committee report5 for the bill that became the 
1790 Act, which expressly noted the drafters’ reliance on the English practice: 
The Bill depending before the House of Representatives for the Promotion 
of useful Arts is framed according to the Course of Practice in the English 
Patent Office except in two Instances— 
 
22 J. Pat. Off. Soc’y at 363 (emphasis added).6  Likewise, the legislative history of the 
1793 Patent Act reflects the same keen understanding of English patent practice.  
During a debate in the House over the creation of a Patent Office, for example, the 
                                            
4  
Edward C. Walterscheid, To Promote the Progress of Useful Arts: 
American Patent Law & Administration, 1798-1836 109 (1998) (hereinafter To Promote 
the Progress); see also Edward C. Walterscheid, The Early Evolution of the United 
States Patent Law:  Antecedents (Part 1), 76 J. Pat. & Trademark Off. Soc’y 697, 698 
(1994) (“[T]he English common law relating to patents was what was best known in the 
infant United States.”).    
5  
Senate Committee Report Accompanying Proposed Amendments to H.R. 
41, reprinted in Proceedings in Congress During the Years 1789 & 1790 Relating to the 
First Patent & Copyright Laws, 22 J. Pat. Off. Soc’y 352, 363 (1940). 
6  
Neither of those two instances related to patentable subject matter or was 
adopted in the enacted statute.  The first proposed departure from the English practice 
was a novelty provision protecting the inventor against those who derived their 
knowledge of the invention from the true inventor; the second was in a requirement that 
patentees make a “Public Advertisement” of their invention.  Such a requirement was 
thought necessary “in so extensive a Country as the United States.”  Senate Report, 
reprinted in 22 J. Pat. Off. Soc’y at 363-64.   
The American statute ultimately differed in some other respects.  For example, 
Congress rejected the English rule that the invention need only be novel in England.   
The American statute required novelty against the whole world and did not permit 
“patents of importation.”  See To Promote the Progress, supra n.4 at 95-97, 137-38. 
 
2007-1130 3 
 

Representative who introduced the bill noted that its principles were “an imitation of the 
Patent System of Great Britain.”  3 Annals of Congress 855 (1793).
Later, Justice Story, writing for the Supreme Court, recognized the profound 
influence of the English practice on these early patent laws, which in many respects 
codified the common law: 
It is obvious to the careful inquirer, that many of the provisions of our 
patent act are derived from the principles and practice which have 
prevailed in the construction of that of England. . . .  The language of [the 
patent clause of the Statute of Monopolies] is not, as we shall presently 
see, identical with ours; but the construction of it adopted by the English 
courts, and the principles and practice which have long regulated the 
grants of their patents, as they must have been known and are tacitly 
referred to in some of the provisions of our own statute, afford materials to 
illustrate it. 
 
Pennock v. Dialogue, 27 U.S. 1, 18 (1829) (emphases added); see also Graham v. 
John Deere Co., 383 U.S. 1, 5 (1966) (noting that first patent statute was written against 
the “backdrop” of English monopoly practices); Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Stiffel Co., 376 
U.S. 225, 230 n.6 (1964) (“Much American patent law derives from English patent 
law.”). 
 
While Congress departed from the English practice in certain limited respects, in 
many respects Congress simply adopted the English practice without change.  Both the 
1790 and the 1793 Acts, for example, adopted the same 14-year patent term as in 
                                            
7  
Even the opposing view—urging departure from the English practice in 
particular respects—recognized that the English practice provided considerable 
guidance.  See 3 Annals of Congress at 855-56 (“[Great Britain] had afforded, it was 
true, much experience on the subject; but regulations adopted there would not exactly 
comport in all respects either with the situation of this country, or with the rights of the 
citizen here.  The minds of some members had taken a wrong direction, he conceived, 
from the view in which they had taken up the subject under its analogy with the doctrine 
of patents in England.”); see also To Promote the Progress, supra n.4 at 216-17. 
 
2007-1130 4 
 

England.  Both also required inventors to file a written specification—a requirement 
recognized by the English common law courts in the mid-eighteenth century.8  In 
addition, as discussed below, the categories of patentable subject matter closely 
tracked the English approach, and in certain respects reflected a deliberate choice 
between competing views prevalent in England at the time. 

The English practice in 1793, imported into the American statutes, explicitly 
recognized a limit on patentable subject matter.  As the Supreme Court recounted in 
Graham v. John Deere, the English concern about limiting the allowable scope of 
patents arose from an aversion to the odious Crown practice of granting patents on 
particular types of businesses to court favorites. 383 U.S. 1, 5 (1966); see also 
MacLeod, supra n.8 at 15 (“But most offensive of all was the granting of monopoly 
powers in established industries, as a form of patronage, to courtiers whom the crown 
could not otherwise afford to reward.”).  Parliament responded to the Crown’s abuses in 
1623 by passing the Statute of Monopolies, prohibiting the Crown from granting these 
despised industry-type monopolies.  Not all monopolies were prohibited, however: the 
Statute expressly exempted invention-type patent monopolies.  Section 6 of the Statute 
exempted from its prohibitions “letters patent and grants of privilege for the term of 
fourteen years or under, hereafter to be made, of the sole working or making of any 
manner of new manufactures within this realm, to the true and first inventor and 
inventors of such manufactures . . . .”  21 Jac. 1. c.3, s.6 (emphases added).   
                                            
8  
See Christine MacLeod, Inventing the Industrial Revolution: The English 
Patent System, 1660-1800 48-49 (2002); To Promote the Progress, supra n.4 at 400, 
404.   
2007-1130 5 
 

Each of the five categories of patentable subject matter recognized by the 1793 
Patent Act—(1) “manufacture,” (2) “machine,” (3) ”composition of matter,”  (4) “any new 
and useful improvement,” and (5) “art”—was drawn either from the Statute of 
Monopolies and the common law refinement of its interpretation or resolved competing 
views being debated in England at the time.  See To Promote the Progress, supra n.4 at 
239.   
“Manufacture.”  At the most basic level, the 1793 Act, like the Statute of 
Monopolies, expressly provided for the patentability of “manufactures.”  This language 
was not accidental, but rather reflected a conscious adoption of that term as it was used 
in the English practice.  Id. (“It is clear that the Congress sought to incorporate into the 
U.S. statutory scheme in 1793 at least as much of the common law interpretation of 
‘new manufactures’ as was understood at the time.”). 
“Machine.”  Likewise, the category of “machines” in the 1793 Act had long been 
understood to be within the term “manufactures” as used in the English statute.  See id.; 
see, e.g., Morris v. Bramson, 1 Carp. P.C. 30, 31 (K.B. 1776) (sustaining a patent “for 
an engine or machine on which is fixed a set of working needles. . . for the making of 
eyelet-holes”) (emphasis added); MacLeod, supra n.8 at 101 (noting, among numerous 
other early machine patents, seven patents on “machinery to raise coal and ores” 
before 1750).   
“Composition of Matter.”  Although the 1790 statute did not explicitly include 
“compositions of matter,” this was remedied in the 1793 statute.  At the time, 
“compositions of matter” were already understood to be a type of manufacture 
patentable under the English statute.  See To Promote the Progress, supra n.4, at 
2007-1130 6 
 

224 n.4.  One example is found in Liardet v. Johnson, 1 Carp. P.C. 35 (K.B. 1778), a 
case involving a patent on a “composition” of stucco (a composition of matter).  Lord 
Mansfield’s jury instructions noted that by the time of that trial he had decided “several 
cases” involving compositions:  “But if . . . the specification of the composition gives no 
proportions, there is an end of his patent. . . . I have determined, [in] several cases here, 
the specification must state, where there is a composition, the proportions . . . .”9  
 “Any new and useful improvement.”   The reference to “any new and useful 
improvement” in the 1793 Act also adopted a consensus recently reached by the 
English courts. The common law courts had first ruled in Bircot’s Case in the early 
seventeenth century that an improvement to an existing machine could not be the 
proper subject of a patent under the Statute of Monopolies.  See Boulton v. Bull, 2 H. Bl. 
463, 488 (C.P. 1795).  In 1776 that line of cases was overruled in Morris v. Bramson, 
because such a reading of the statute “would go to repeal almost every patent that was 
ever granted.”10 
“Art.”  As the Supreme Court has recognized, a process “was considered a form 
of ‘art’ as that term was used in the 1793 Act.”  Diehr, 450 U.S. at 182 (citing Corning v. 
Burden, 56 U.S. at 267-268).  The language of the Statute of Monopolies permitted 
patents on that which could be characterized as the “working or making of any manner 
of new manufactures within this realm.”  21 Jac. 1. c.3, s.6.  While this language plainly 
                                            
9  
Edward C. Walterscheid, The Nature of the Intellectual Property Clause: A 
Study in Historical Perspective 55 (2002) (quoting E. Wyndham Hulme, On the History 
of the Patent Laws in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries, 18 L.Q. Rev. 280, 285 
(1902)). 
10  
Morris, 1 Carp. P.C. at 34; see also Boulton, 2 H.Bl. at 489 (“Since [Morris 
v. Bramson], it has been the generally received opinion in Westminster Hall, that a 
patent for an addition is good.”). 
2007-1130 7 
 

applied to tangible “new manufactures” (such as machines or compositions of matter), it 
also appeared to allow patenting of manufacturing processes as the “working or making 
of any manner of new manufactures.”  Thus, under the Statute of Monopolies patents 
could be had on the “working or making of any manner of new manufactures.” 
Numerous method patents had issued by 1793, including James Watt’s famous 1769 
patent on a “[m]ethod of diminishing the consumption of fuel in [steam]-engines.”11  
However, the English courts in the mid-eighteenth century had not yet resolved whether 
processes for manufacturing were themselves patentable under the statute, and as 
discussed below, the issue was being actively litigated in the English courts.  In the 
1793 Act Congress resolved this question by including the term “art” in the statute, 
adopting the practice of the English law officers and the views of those in England who 
favored process patents.    
II 
 
The question remains as to what processes were considered to be patentable in 
England at the time of the 1793 Act.  Examination of the relevant sources leads to the 
conclusion that the method Bilski seeks to claim would not have been considered 
patentable subject matter as a process under the English statute. 

 
First, the language of the Statute of Monopolies—“working or making of any 
manner of new manufactures”—suggests that only processes that related to 
“manufactures” (including machines or compositions of matter) could be patented. 
                                            
11  
Walterscheid, supra n.9 at 355-56 (emphasis added); see also Boulton, 2 
H. Bl. at 494-95 (1795) (noting that many method patents had issued). 
 
2007-1130 8 
 

Second, the English patent practice before and contemporaneous with the 1793 
Act confirms the notion that patentable subject matter was limited by the term 
“manufacture” in the Statute of Monopolies and required a relation to the other 
categories of patentable subject matter.  The organization of human activity was not 
within its bounds.  Rather, the patents registered in England under the Statute of 
Monopolies before 1793 were limited to articles of manufacture, machines for 
manufacturing, compositions of matter, and related processes.  A complete list of such 
patents (with a few missing patents from the 17th century) was published in the mid-
1800s by Bennet Woodcroft, the first head of the English Patent Office.12  
Representative examples of patented processes at the time include: “Method of making 
a more easy and perfect division in stocking frame-work manufactures,” No. 1417 to 
John Webb (1784); “Making and preparing potashes and pearl-ashes of materials not 
before used for the purpose,” No. 1223 to Richard Shannon (1779); “Making salt from 
sea-water or brine, by steam,” No. 1006 to Daniel Scott (1772); “Milling raw hides and 
skins so as to be equally good for leather as if tanned,” No. 893 to George Merchant 
(1768); “Making salt, and removing the corrosive nature of the same, by a separate 
preparation of the brine,” No. 416 to George Campbell (1717); and “Making good and 
merchantable tough iron . . . with one-fifth of the expense of charcoal as now used,” No. 
113 to Sir Phillibert Vernatt (1637). 
Nothing in Woodcroft’s list suggests that any of these hundreds of patents was 
on a method for organizing human activity, save for one aberrational patent discussed 
                                            
12  
Bennet Woodcroft, Alphabetical Index of Patentees of Inventions, from 
March 2, 1617 (14 James I) to October 1, 1852 (16 Victoriae) (2d ed. 1857)). 
 
2007-1130 9 
 

below.  Rather, the established practice reflects the understanding that only processes 
related to manufacturing or “manufactures” were within the statute.  The English cases 
before 1793 recognized that the practice followed in issuing patents was directly 
relevant to the construction of the statute.  See, e.g., Morris, 1 Carp. P.C. at 34 
(declining to read the statute in such a way that “would go to repeal almost every patent 
that was ever granted”).  
Third, nearly contemporaneous English cases following shortly after the 1793 Act 
lend further insight into what processes were thought to be patentable under the English 
practice at the time the statute was enacted.  Although the issue of the validity of 
process patents had not conclusively been settled in the English common law before 
1793, the question was brought before the courts in the landmark case of Boulton v. 
Bull, 2 H. Bl. 463, 465 (C.P. 1795), which involved James Watt’s patent for a “method of 
lessening the consumption of steam, and consequently fuel in [steam] engines.”13    In 
1795, the court rendered a split decision, with two judges on each side.  Boulton, 2 H. 
Bl. at 463 (1795).  Those who viewed process patents as invalid, as did Justice Buller, 
urged that a method was merely an unpatentable principle: “A patent must be for some 
new production from [elements of nature], and not for the elements themselves.”  Id. at 
485.  He thought “it impossible to support a patent for a method only, without having 
carried it into effect and produced some new substance.”  Id.  at 486.  Justice Health 
similarly found that the “new invented method for lessening the consumption of steam 
                                            
13  
The Supreme Court has in several opinions noted Boulton v. Bull in 
connection with its consideration of English patent practice.  See, e.g., Markman v. 
Westview Instruments, Inc., 517 U.S. 370 , 381 n.6 (1996); Evans v. Eaton, 20 U.S. (7 
Wheat.) 356, 388 n.2-3 (1822). 
 
2007-1130 10 
 

and fuel in [steam] engines” (i.e., the Watt patent), being neither “machinery” nor a 
“substance[] (such as medicine[]) formed by chemical and other processes,” was not 
within the Statute of Monopolies.  Id. at 481-82.  In contrast, Lord Chief Justice Eyres, 
who believed processes had long been a valid subject of patents, urged that “two-thirds, 
I believe I might say three-fourths, of all patents granted since the statute [of 
Monopolies] passed, are for methods of operating and of manufacturing . . . .”    Id. at 
494-95 (emphasis added).  He agreed that “[u]ndoubtedly there can be no patent for a 
mere principle; but for a principle so far embodied and connected with corporeal 
substances . . . I think there may be a patent.”  Id. at 495 (emphasis added).  Justice 
Rooke also noted that Watt’s method was within the statute because it was connected 
with machinery: “What method can there be of saving steam or fuel in engines, but by 
some variation in the construction of them?”  Id. at 478.  The Justices who believed 
process patents were valid spoke in terms of manufacturing, machines, and 
compositions of matter, because the processes they believed fell within the statute were 
processes that “embodied and connected with corporeal substances.”  Id. at 495.  
In 1799, on appeal from another case involving the same Watt patent, the validity 
of such process patents were upheld. Hornblower v. Boulton (K.B. 1799), 8 T.R. 95.  
There, Chief Justice Lord Kenyon stated that “it evidently appears that the patentee 
claims a monopoly for an engine or machine, composed of material parts, which are to 
produce the effect described; and that the mode of producing this is so described, as to 
enable mechanics to produce it. . . .  I have no doubt in saying, that this is a patent for a 
manufacture, which I understand to be something made by the hands of man.”  Id. at 
99.  Justice Grose agreed, finding that “Mr. Watt had invented a method of lessening 
2007-1130 11 
 

the consumption of steam and fuel in [steam] engines”, and this was “not a patent for a 
mere principle, but for the working and making of a new manufacture within the words 
and meaning of the statute.”  Id. at 101-02.  He further noted, however, that “This 
method . . . if not effected or accompanied by a manufacture, I should hardly consider 
as within the [statute].”  Id. at 102-03 (emphasis added).  Justice Lawrence similarly 
found such process patents to be permissible: “Engine and method mean the same 
thing, and may be the subject of a patent.  ‘Method,’ properly speaking, is only placing 
several things and performing several operations in the most convenient order . . . .”  Id. 
at 106.   
There is no suggestion in any of this early consideration of process patents that 
processes for organizing human activity were or ever had been patentable.  Rather, the 
uniform assumption was that the only processes that were patentable were processes 
for using or creating manufactures, machines, and compositions of matter. 

 
The dissenters here, by implication at least, appear to assume that this 
consistent English practice should somehow be ignored in interpreting the current 
statute because of technological change.14  There are several responses to this. 
 
The first of these is that the Supreme Court has made clear that when Congress 
intends to codify existing law, as was the case with the 1793 statute, the law must be 
interpreted in light of the practice at the time of codification.  In Schmuck v. United 
2007-1130 12 
 

States, 489 U.S. 705, 718-19 (1989), for example, the Court considered the proper 
interpretation of Rule 31(c) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure.  The rule, 
“which ha[d] not been amended since its adoption in 1944,” was a restatement of an 
1872 Act “codif[ying] the common law for federal criminal trials.”  Because of this fact, 
the Court found that the “prevailing practice at the time of the Rule’s promulgation 
informs our understanding of its terms.”  Id.;  see also, e.g., Eldred v. Ashcroft, 537 U.S. 
186, 200 n.5 (2003) (considering the English practice at the time of the enactment of the 
1790 copyright act); Tome v. United States, 513 U.S. 150, 159-60, 166 (1995) (looking 
to practice and noting that “a majority of common-law courts were performing [a task 
required by the common law] for well over a century” in interpreting a Federal Rule of 
Evidence that “was intended to carry over the common-law”); Harper & Row Publishers, 
Inc. v. Nation Enters., 471 U.S. 539, 549-554 (1985) (relying on the history and practice 
of copyright fair-use when statutory provision reflected the “intent of Congress to codify 
the common-law doctrine”); Sprague v. Ticonic Nat’l Bank, 307 U.S. 161, 164-65 (1939) 
(considering the English practice “which theretofore had been evolved in the English 
Court of Chancery” at the time of the 1789 Judiciary Act in determining availability of 
costs under equity jurisdiction).  
                                                                                                                                             
14  
See,  e.g., Rader, J., dissenting op. at 1 (“[T]his court ties our patent 
system to dicta from an industrial age decades removed from the bleeding edge.”); id.  
(“[T]his court . . . links patent eligibility to the age of iron and steel at a time of subatomic 
particles and terabytes . . . .”); Newman, J., dissenting op. at 5 (“[T]his court now adopts 
a redefinition of ‘process’ in Section 101 that excludes forms of information-based and 
software-implemented inventions arising from new technological capabilities . . . .”). 
2007-1130 13 
 

Second, the Supreme Court language upon which the dissents rely15 offers no 
warrant for rewriting the 1793 Act.  To be sure, Congress intended the courts to have 
some latitude in interpreting § 101 to cover emerging technologies, Chakrabarty, 447 
U.S. at 316, and the categorical terms chosen are sufficiently broad to encompass a 
wide range of new technologies.  But there is no evidence that Congress intended to 
confer upon the courts latitude to extend the categories of patentable subject matter in a 
significant way.  To the contrary, the Supreme Court made clear that “Congress has 
performed its constitutional role in defining patentable subject matter in § 101; we 
perform ours in construing the language Congress has employed.  In so doing, our 
obligation is to take statutes as we find them, guided, if ambiguity appears, by the 
legislative history and statutory purpose.”  Id. at 315.  In Benson, the Court rejected the 
argument that its decision would “freeze process patents to old technologies, leaving no 
room for the revelations of the new, onrushing technology.”  Gottschalk v. Benson, 409 
U.S. 63, 71 (1972).  Instead, the Court explained that it “may be that the patent laws 
should be extended to cover [such onrushing technology], a policy matter to which we 
are not competent to speak” but that “considered action by the Congress is needed.”  Id. 
at 72-73.   
Third, we are not dealing here with a type of subject matter unknown in 1793.  
One commentator has noted: 
                                            
15  
See, e.g., Newman, J., dissenting op. at 10 (“‘[C]ourts should not read into 
the patent laws limitations and conditions which the legislature has not expressed.’” 
(quoting Diehr, 450 U.S. at 182)); Rader, J., dissenting op. at 3 (same). 
 
 
2007-1130 14 
 

The absence of business method patents cannot be explained by 
an absence of entrepreneurial creativity in Great Britain during the century 
before the American Revolution.  On the contrary, 1720 is widely hailed as 
the beginning of a new era in English public finance and the beginning of 
major innovations in business organization.  
 
Malla Pollack, The Multiple Unconstitutionality of Business Method Patents, 28 Rutgers 
Computer & Tech. L.J. 61, 96 (2002) (footnotes omitted).16  In the hundreds of patents 
in Woodcroft’s exhaustive list of English patents granted from 1612 to 1793, there 
appears to be only a single patent akin to the type of method Bilski seeks to claim.  That 
sole exception was a patent granted to John Knox in 1778 on a “Plan for assurances on 
lives of persons from 10 to 80 years of age.”17    Later commentators have viewed this 
single patent as clearly contrary to the Statute of Monopolies:   
Such protection of an idea should be impossible . . . .  It  is  difficult  to 
understand how Knox’s plan for insuring lives could be regarded as ‘a new 
manner of manufacture’; perhaps the Law Officer was in a very good 
humour that day, or perhaps he had forgotten the wording of the statute; 
most likely he was concerned only with the promised ‘very considerable 
Consumption of [Revenue] Stamps’ which, Knox declared, would 
‘contribute to the increase of the Public Revenues.’ 
 
Renn, supra n.16 at 285.  There is no indication that Knox’s patent was ever enforced or 
its validity tested, or that this example led to other patents or efforts to patent similar 
activities.  But the existence of the Knox patent suggests that as of 1793 the potential 
advantage of patenting such activities was well-understood. 
 
In short, the need to accommodate technological change in no way suggests that 
                                            
16 Similarly, another commentator states: “it might be wondered why none of the 
many ingenious schemes of insurance has ever been protected by patenting it.”  D.F. 
Renn, John Knox’s Plan for Insuring Lives: A Patent of Invention in 1778, 101 J. Inst. 
Actuaries 285 (1974), available at http://www.actuaries.org.uk/__data/assets/ 
pdf_file/
0006/25278/0285-0289.pdf (last visited Oct. 3, 2008). 
2007-1130 15 
 

the judiciary is charged with rewriting the statute to include methods for organizing 
human activity that do not involve manufactures, machines, or compositions of matter. 

Since the 1793 statute was reenacted in 1952, it is finally important also to 
inquire whether between 1793 and 1952 the U.S. Patent Office and the courts in this 
country had departed from the English practice and allowed patents such as those 
sought by Bilski.  In fact, the U.S. Patent Office operating under the 1793 Act hewed 
closely to the original understanding of the statute.  As in the English practice of the 
time, there is no evidence that patents were granted under the 1793 Act on methods of 
organizing human activity not involving manufactures, machines or the creation of 
compositions of matter.  The amicus briefs have addressed the early American practice, 
and some of them claim that human activity patents were allowed in the early period.  
To the contrary, the patents cited in the briefs are plainly distinguishable. 
The earliest claimed human activity patent cited in the briefs issued in 1840, 
entitled “Improvement in the Mathematical Operation of Drawing Lottery-Schemes.”  Br. 
of Amicus Curiae Regulatory Datacorp 23 n.54.  But that patent is fundamentally unlike 
the Bilski claim, since it does not claim a method of organizing human activity not 
involving manufactures, machines or the creation of compositions of matter.  See U.S. 
Patent No. 1700 (issued July 18, 1840).  Rather, it is directed to a scheme of combining 
different combinations of numbers onto a large number of physical lottery tickets (i.e., a 
                                                                                                                                             
17  
Woodcroft, supra n.12 at 324. 
 
 
2007-1130 16 
 

method for manufacturing lottery tickets).  Id. col.1.  The other early-issued patents cited 
in the amicus briefs are similarly distinguishable.18 
Likewise, Supreme Court decisions before the 1952 Patent Act assumed that the 
only processes that were patentable were those involving other types of patentable 
subject matter.  In later cases the Supreme Court has recognized that these cases set 
forth the standard for process patents in the pre-1952 period.  Diehr, 450 U.S. at 182-
84; Gottschalk, 409 U.S. at 69-70.  The leading case is Corning v. Burden, 56 U.S. 252 
(1853).  There, the Supreme Court discussed the patentability of processes: 
A process, eo nomine, is not made the subject of a patent in our act 
of Congress. It is included under the general term ‘useful art.’  An art may 
require one or more processes or machines in order to produce a certain 
result or manufacture.  The term machine includes every mechanical 
device or combination of mechanical powers and devices to perform some 
function and produce a certain effect or result.  But where the result or 
effect is produced by chemical action, by the operation or application of 
some element or power of nature, or of one substance to another, such 
modes, methods, or operations, are called ‘processes.’  A new process is 
usually the result of discovery; a machine, of invention.  The arts of 
tanning, dyeing, making water-proof cloth, vulcanizing India rubber, 
smelting ores, and numerous others are usually carried on by processes, 
as distinguished from machines. . . .  It is for the discovery or invention of 
                                            
18  
See,  e.g., Complemental Accident Insurance Policy, U.S. Patent No. 
389,818 (issued Sept. 18, 1888) (claiming a “complemental insurance policy” as an 
apparatus consisting of two separate cards secured together); Insurance System, U.S. 
Patent No. 853,852 (issued May 14, 1907) (claiming a “two-part insurance policy” as “an 
article of manufacture”). 
A number of the amici also refer to the discussion and the patents cited in “A 
USPTO White Paper”  (the “White Paper”) to establish the historical foundation of 
business method patents.  See, e.g., Br. of Amicus Curiae Accenture 14-15 n. 11.  As 
Judge Mayer notes, dissenting op. at 7 n.4, the White Paper does not show this 
proposition.  As the White Paper itself recognizes, the early financial patents it 
discusses were largely mechanical products and methods related to financial paper, not 
methods for organizing human activity.  White Paper at 2.  Thus, while the White Paper 
shows that inventions in the business realm of finance and management historically 
enjoyed patent protection, it does little to establish that business methods directed to 
the organization of human activity not involving manufactures, machines or the creation 
of compositions of matter were similarly patentable. 
2007-1130 17 
 

some practicable method or means of producing a beneficial result or 
effect that a patent is granted, and not for the result or effect itself.  It is 
when the term process is used to represent the means or method of 
producing a result that it is patentable, and it will include all methods or 
means which are not effected by mechanism or mechanical combinations. 
 
Id. at 267-68 (emphases added).  In Cochrane v. Deener, the Court clarified its 
understanding of a patentable “process”: 
That a process may be patentable, irrespective of the particular 
form of the instrumentalities used, cannot be disputed. . . .  A process is a 
mode of treatment of certain materials to produce a given result.  It is an 
act, or a series of acts, performed upon the subject-matter to be 
transformed and reduced to a different state or thing. If new and useful, it 
is just as patentable as is a piece of machinery. In the language of the 
patent law, it is an art.  The machinery pointed out as suitable to perform 
the process may or may not be new or patentable; whilst the process itself 
may be altogether new, and produce an entirely new result.  The process 
requires that certain things should be done with certain substances, and in 
a certain order; but the tools to be used in doing this may be of secondary 
consequence. 
 
94 U.S. 780, 787-88 (1876) (emphases added).  Finally, in Tilghman v. Proctor, 102 
U.S. 707, 722 (1880), the Court noted:  
That a patent can be granted for a process there can be no doubt. 
The patent law is not confined to new machines and new compositions of 
matter, but extends to any new and useful art or manufacture. A 
manufacturing process is clearly an art, within the meaning of the law. 
 
(Emphasis added).  The Court’s definition of a patentable process was well-accepted 
and consistently applied by the courts of appeals.  See, e.g., P.E. Sharpless Co. v. 
Crawford Farms, 287 F. 655, 658-59 (2nd Cir. 1923); Chicago Sugar-Refining Co. v. 
Charles Pope Glucose Co., 84 F. 977, 982 (7th Cir. 1898). 
Finally, nothing in the legislative history of the 1952 Act suggests that Congress 
intended to enlarge the category of patentable subject matter to include patents such as 
the method Bilski attempts to claim.  As discussed above, the only change made by the 
2007-1130 18 
 

1952 Act was in replacing the word “art” with the word “process.”  The Supreme Court 
has already concluded that this change did not alter the substantive understanding of 
the statute.  See Diehr, 450 U.S. at 182 (“[A] process has historically enjoyed patent 
protection because it was considered a form of ‘art’ as that term was used in the 1793 
Act.”).   
The House Report accompanying the 1952 bill includes the now-famous 
reference to “anything under the sun made by man”: 
A person may have “invented” a machine or a manufacture, which may 
include anything under the sun made by man, but it is not necessarily 
patentable under section 101 unless the conditions of the title are fulfilled. 
 
H.R. 1923 at 7.  Although this passage has been used by our court in past cases to 
justify a broad interpretation of patentable subject matter, I agree with Judge Mayer that, 
when read in context, the statement undercuts the notion that Congress intended to 
expand the scope of § 101.  See Mayer, J., dissenting op. at 5-6.  It refers to things 
“made by man,” not to methods of organizing human activity.  In this respect, the 
language is reminiscent of the 1799 use of the phrase “something made by the hands of 
man” by Chief Justice Lord Kenyon as a limitation on patentable subject matter under 
the Statute of Monopolies.  The idea that an invention must be “made by man” was 
used to distinguish “a philosophical principle only, neither organized or capable of being 
organized” from a patentable manufacture.  Hornblower, 8 T.R. at 98.  Lord Kenyon 
held that the patent before him was not based on a mere principle, but was rather “a 
patent for a manufacture, which I understand to be something made by the hands of 
man.”  Id. at 98 (emphases added); accord American Fruit Growers v. Brogdex Co., 283 
2007-1130 19 
 

U.S. 1, 11 (1931) (giving “anything made for use from raw or prepared materials” as one 
definition of “manufacture”).   
In short, the history of § 101 fully supports the majority’s holding that Bilski’s 
claim does not recite patentable subject matter.  Our decision does not reflect 
“legislative” work, but rather careful and respectful adherence to the Congressional 
purpose. 
2007-1130 20 
 

United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
2007-1130 
(Serial No. 08/883,892) 
 
 
 
IN RE BERNARD L. BILSKI  
and RAND A. WARSAW 
 
 
 
Appeal from the United States Patent and Trademark Office, Board of Patent Appeals 
and Interferences. 
 
 
NEWMAN, Circuit Judge, dissenting. 
 
The court today acts en banc to impose a new and far-reaching restriction on the 
kinds of inventions that are eligible to participate in the patent system.  The court 
achieves this result by redefining the word “process” in the patent statute, to exclude all 
processes that do not transform physical matter or that are not performed by machines.  
The court thus excludes many of the kinds of inventions that apply today’s electronic 
and photonic technologies, as well as other processes that handle data and information 
in novel ways.  Such processes have long been patent eligible, and contribute to the 
vigor and variety of today’s Information Age. This exclusion of process inventions is 
contrary to statute, contrary to precedent, and a negation of the constitutional mandate.  
Its impact on the future, as well as on the thousands of patents already granted, is 
unknown. 
This exclusion is imposed at the threshold, before it is determined whether the 
excluded process is new, non-obvious, enabled, described, particularly claimed, etc.; 
that is, before the new process is examined for patentability.  For example, we do not 

know whether the Bilski process would be found patentable under the statutory criteria, 
for they were never applied. 
The innovations of the “knowledge economy”—of “digital prosperity”—have been 
dominant contributors to today’s economic growth and societal change.  Revision of the 
commercial structure affecting major aspects of today’s industry should be approached 
with care, for there has been significant reliance on the law as it has existed, as many 
amici curiae pointed out.  Indeed, the full reach of today’s change of law is not clear, 
and the majority opinion states that many existing situations may require reassessment 
under the new criteria.   
Uncertainty is the enemy of innovation.  These new uncertainties not only 
diminish the incentives available to new enterprise, but disrupt the settled expectations 
of those who relied on the law as it existed.  I respectfully dissent. 
DISCUSSION 
The court’s exclusion of specified process inventions from access to the patent 
system is achieved by redefining the word “process” in the patent statute.  However, the 
court’s redefinition is contrary to statute and to explicit rulings of the Supreme Court and 
this court.  I start with the statute: 
Section 101 is the statement of statutory eligibility 
From the first United States patent act in 1790, the subject matter of the “useful 
arts” has been stated broadly, lest advance restraints inhibit the unknown future. 
The nature of patent-eligible subject matter has received judicial attention over the 
years, as new issues arose with advances in science and technology.  The Supreme 
Court has consistently confirmed the constitutional and legislative purpose of providing 
2007-1130 
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a broadly applicable incentive to commerce and creativity, through this system of limited 
exclusivity.  Concurrently, the Court early explained the limits of patentable subject 
matter, in that “fundamental truths” were not intended to be included in a system of 
exclusive rights, for they are the general foundations of knowledge.  Thus laws of 
nature, natural phenomena, and abstract ideas are not subject to patenting.  Several 
rulings of the Court have reviewed patent eligibility in light of these fundamentals.  
However, the Court explicitly negated today’s restrictions.  My colleagues in the majority 
are mistaken in finding that decisions of the Court require the per se limits to patent 
eligibility that the Federal Circuit today imposes.  The patent statute and the Court’s 
decisions neither establish nor support the exclusionary criteria now adopted. 
The court today holds that any process that does not transform physical matter or 
require performance by machine is not within the definition of “process” in any of the 
patent statutes since 1790.  All of the statutes contained a broad definition of patent-
eligible subject matter, like that in the current Patent Act of 1952: 
35 U.S.C §101  Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful 
process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and 
useful improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the 
conditions and requirements of this title. 
 
In Diamond v. Diehr, 450 U.S. 175 (1981) the Court explained that Section 101 is not an 
independent condition of patentability, but a general statement of subject matter 
eligibility.  The Court stated: 
Section 101, however, is a general statement of the type of subject matter 
that is eligible for patent protection “subject to the conditions and 
requirements of this title.”  Specific conditions for patentability follow and 
§102 covers in detail the conditions relating to novelty.  The question 
therefore of whether a particular invention is novel is “wholly apart from 
whether the invention falls in a category of statutory subject matter.” 
 
2007-1130 
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Id. at 189-90 (footnote omitted) (quoting In re Bergy, 596 F.2d 952, 961 (C.C.P.A. 
1979)). 
“Process” is defined in the 1952 statute as follows: 
35 U.S.C. §100(b)  The term “process” means process, art or method, and 
includes a new use of a known process, machine, manufacture, 
composition of matter, or material. 
 
The 1952 Patent Act replaced the word “art” in prior statutes with the word 
“process,” while the rest of Section 101 was unchanged from earlier statutes.  
The legislative history for the 1952 Act explained that “art” had been “interpreted 
by courts to be practically synonymous with process or method.”  S. Rep. No. 82-
1979 (1952), reprinted in 1952 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2394, 2398, 2409-10.  In Diehr the 
Court explained that a process “has historically enjoyed patent protection 
because it was considered a form of ‘art’ as that term was used in the 1793 Act.”  
450 U.S. at 182. 
The definition of “process” provided at 35 U.S.C. §100(b) is not “unhelpful,” as 
this court now states, maj. op. at 6 n.3, but rather points up the errors in the court’s new 
statutory interpretation.  Section 100(b) incorporates the prior usage “art” and the term 
“method,” and places no restriction on the definition.  This court’s redefinition of 
“process” as limiting access to the patent system to those processes that use specific 
machinery or that transform matter, is contrary to two centuries of statutory definition. 
The breadth of Section 101 and its predecessor provisions reflects the legislative 
intention to accommodate not only known fields of creativity, but also the unknown 
future.  The Court has consistently refrained from imposing unwarranted restrictions on 
statutory eligibility, and for computer-implemented processes the Court has explicitly 
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rejected the direction now taken.  Nonetheless, this court now adopts a redefinition of 
“process” in Section 101 that excludes forms of information-based and software-
implemented inventions arising from new technological capabilities, stating that this 
result is required by the Court’s computer-related cases, starting with Gottschalk v.  
Benson, 409 U.S. 63 (1972).  However, the Court in Benson rejected the restriction that 
is imposed today: 
This court’s new definition of “process” was rejected in Gottschalk v. Benson 
 
In Benson the claimed invention was a mathematical process for converting 
binary-coded decimal numerals into pure binary numbers.  The Court explained that a 
mathematical formula unlimited to a specific use was simply an abstract idea of the 
nature of “fundamental truths,” “phenomena of nature,” and “abstract intellectual 
concepts,” as have traditionally been outside of patent systems.  409 U.S. at 67.  
However, the Court explicitly declined to limit patent-eligible processes in the manner 
now adopted by this court, stating: 
It is argued that a process patent must either be tied to a particular 
machine or apparatus or must operate to change articles or materials to a 
“different state or thing.”  We do not hold that no process patent could ever 
qualify if it did not meet the requirements of our prior precedents.  It is said 
that the decision precludes a patent for any program servicing a computer.  
We do not so hold. 
 
Id. at 71.  The Court explained that “the requirements of our prior precedents” did not 
preclude patents on computer programs, despite the statement drawn from Cochrane v. 
Deener, 94 U.S. 780, 787-88 (1876), that “[t]ransformation and reduction of an article ‘to 
a different state or thing’ is the clue to the patentability of a process claim that does not 
include particular machines.”  Benson, 409 U.S. at 70.  Although this same statement is 
now relied upon by this court as requiring its present ruling, maj. op at 13 & n.11, the 
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5
 

Court in Benson was explicit that: “We do not hold that no process patent could ever 
qualify if it did not meet [the Court’s] prior precedents.”  The Court recognized that 
Cochrane’s statement was made in the context of a mechanical process and a past era, 
and protested: 
It is said we freeze process patents to old technologies, leaving no room 
for the revelations of the new, onrushing technology.  Such is not our 
purpose. 
 
Benson, 409 U.S. at 71.  Instead, the Court made clear that it was not barring patents 
on computer programs, and rejected the “argu[ment] that a process patent must either 
be tied to a particular machine or apparatus or must operate to change articles or 
materials to a ‘different state or thing’” in order to satisfy Section 101.  Id.  Although my 
colleagues now describe these statements as “equivocal,” maj. op. at 14, there is 
nothing equivocal about “We do not so hold.”  Benson, 409 U.S. at 71.  Nonetheless, 
this court now so holds. 
In Parker v. Flook the Court again rejected today’s restrictions  
 
The eligibility of mathematical processes next reached the Court in Parker v. 
Flook, 437 U.S. 584 (1978), where the Court held that the “process” category of Section 
101 was not met by a claim to a mathematical formula for calculation of alarm limits for 
use in connection with catalytic conversion of hydrocarbons and, as in Benson, the 
claim was essentially for the mathematical formula.  The Court later summarized its 
Flook holding, stating in Diamond v.Diehr that: 
The [Flook] application, however, did not purport to explain how these 
other variables were to be determined, nor did it purport “to contain any 
disclosure relating to the chemical processes at work, the monitoring of 
the process variables, nor the means of setting off an alarm or adjusting 
an alarm system.  All that it provides is a formula for computing an 
updated alarm limit.” 
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Diehr, 450 U.S. at 186-87 (quoting Flook, 437 U.S. at 586).   
The Court explained in Flook that a field-of-use restriction to catalytic conversion 
did not distinguish Flook’s mathematical process from that in Benson.  However, the 
Court reiterated that patent eligibility of computer-directed processes is not controlled by 
the “qualifications of our earlier precedents,” again negating any limiting effect of the 
usages of the past, on which this court now places heavy reliance.  The Court stated: 
The statutory definition of “process” is broad.  An argument can be made, 
however, that this Court has only recognized a process as within the 
statutory definition when it either was tied to a particular apparatus or 
operated to change materials to a “different state or thing.”  As in Benson, 
we assume that a valid process patent may issue even if it does not meet 
one of these qualifications of our earlier precedents.[1
 
Flook, 437 U.S. at 589 n.9 (quoting Cochrane, 94 U.S. at 787).  This statement directly 
contravenes this court’s new requirement that all processes must meet the court’s 
“machine-or-transformation test” or be barred from access to the patent system. 
The Court in Flook discussed that abstractions and fundamental principles have 
never been subject to patenting, but recognized the “unclear line” between an abstract 
principle and the application of such principle: 
The line between a patentable “process” and an unpatentable “principle” is 
not always clear.  Both are “conception[s] of the mind, seen only by [their] 
effects when being executed or performed.” 
 
Flook, 437 U.S. at 589 (alterations in original) (quoting Tilghman v. Proctor, 102 U.S. 
707, 728 (1880)). 
                                            
1  
My colleagues cite only part of this quotation as the Court’s holding in 
Flook, maj. op. at 13, ignoring the qualifying words “[a]n argument can be made” as well 
as the next sentence clarifying that this argument was rejected by the Court in Benson 
and is now again rejected in Flook. 
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7
 

The decision in Flook has been recognized as a step in the evolution of the 
Court’s thinking about computers.  See Arrhythmia Res. Tech., Inc. v. Corazonix Corp., 
958 F.2d 1053, 1057 n.4 (Fed. Cir. 1992) (“it appears to be generally agreed that these 
decisions represent evolving views of the Court”) (citing R.L. Gable & J.B. Leaheey, The 
Strength of Patent Protection for Computer Products, 17 Rutgers Computer & Tech. L.J. 
87 (1991); D. Chisum, The Patentability of Algorithms, 47 U. Pitt. L. Rev. 959 (1986)).  
That Flook does not support today’s per se exclusion of forms of process inventions 
from access to the patent system is reinforced in the next Section 101 case decided by 
the Court: 
In Diamond v. Chakrabarty the Court again rejected per se exclusions of subject 
matter from Section 101
 
 
In Diamond v. Chakrabarty, 447 U.S. 303 (1980), the scope of Section 101 was 
challenged as applied to the new fields of biotechnology and genetic engineering, with 
respect to the patent eligibility of a new bacterial “life form.”  The Court explained the 
reason for the broad terms of Section 101: 
The subject-matter provisions of the patent law have been cast in broad 
terms to fulfill the constitutional and statutory goal of promoting “the 
Progress of Science and the useful Arts” with all that means for the social 
and economic benefits envisioned by Jefferson.  Broad general language 
is not necessarily ambiguous when congressional objectives require broad 
terms. 
 
Id. at 315 (quoting U.S. Const., art. I, §8).  The Court referred to the use of “any” in 
Section 101 (“Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process . . . or any new 
and useful improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the conditions 
and requirements of this title”), and reiterated that the statutory language shows that 
Congress “plainly contemplated that the patent laws would be given wide scope.”  Id. at 
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8
 

308.  The Court referred to the legislative intent to include within the scope of Section 
101 “anything under the sun that is made by man,” id. at 309 (citing S. Rep. 82-1979, at 
5; H.R. Rep. 82-1923, at 6 (1952)), and stated that the unforeseeable future should not 
be inhibited by judicial restriction of the “broad general language” of Section 101: 
A rule that unanticipated inventions are without protection would conflict 
with the core concept of the patent law that anticipation undermines 
patentability.  Mr. Justice Douglas reminded that the inventions most 
benefiting mankind are those that push back the frontiers of chemistry, 
physics, and the like.  Congress employed broad general language in 
drafting §101 precisely because such inventions are often unforeseeable. 
 
Id. at 315-16 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).  The Court emphasized 
that its precedents did not alter this understanding of Section 101’s breadth, stating that 
“Flook did not announce a new principle that inventions in areas not contemplated by 
Congress when the patent laws were enacted are unpatentable per se.”  Id. at 315.   
Whether the applications of physics and chemistry that are manifested in 
advances in computer hardware and software were more or less foreseeable than the 
advances in biology and biotechnology is debatable, but it is not debatable that these 
fields of endeavor have become primary contributors to today’s economy and culture, 
as well as offering an untold potential for future advances.  My colleagues offer no 
reason now to adopt a policy of exclusion of the unknown future from the subject matter 
now embraced in Section 101. 
Soon after Chakrabarty was decided, the Court returned to patentability issues 
arising from computer capabilities: 
In Diamond v. Diehr the Court directly held that computer-implemented processes 
are included in Section 101
 
 
2007-1130 
9
 

The invention presented to the Court in Diehr was a “physical and chemical 
process for molding precision synthetic rubber products” where the process steps 
included using a mathematical formula.  The Court held that the invention fit the 
“process” category of Section 101 although mathematical calculations were involved, 
and repeated its observation in Chakrabarty that “courts should not read into the patent 
laws limitations and conditions which the legislature has not expressed.”  Diehr, 450 
U.S. at 182 (internal quotation marks omitted) (citing Chakrabarty, 447 U.S. at 308). 
The Court distinguished a claim that would cover all uses of a mathematical 
formula and thus is an abstract construct, as in Benson, from a claim that applies a 
mathematical calculation for a specified purpose, as in Diehr.  The Court stated that “a 
claim drawn to subject matter otherwise statutory does not become nonstatutory simply 
because it uses a mathematical formula, computer program, or digital computer,” id. at 
187, and explained that the line between statutory and nonstatutory processes depends 
on whether the process is directed to a specific purpose, see id. (“It is now 
commonplace that an application of a law of nature or mathematical formula to a known 
structure or process may well be deserving of patent protection.”  (emphasis in 
original)).  The Court clarified that Flook did not hold that claims may be dissected into 
old and new parts to assess their patent eligibility.  Id. at 189 n.12. 
However, the Court did not propose the “machine-or-transformation” test that this 
court now insists was “enunciated” in Diehr as a specific limit to Section 101.  Maj. op. 
at 10.  In Diehr there was no issue of machine or transformation, for the Diehr process 
both employed a machine and produced a chemical transformation: the process was 
conducted in “an openable rubber molding press,” and it cured the rubber.  In 
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10
 

discussing the known mathematical formula used by Diehr to calculate the relation 
between temperature and the rate of a chemical reaction, the Court recited the 
traditional exceptions of “laws of nature, natural phenomena, and abstract ideas,” 450 
U.S. at 185, and explained that the entirety of the process must be considered, not an 
individual mathematical step. 
The Court characterized the holdings in Benson and Flook as standing for no 
more than the continued relevance of these “long-established” judicial exclusions, id., 
and repeated that a practical application of pure science or mathematics may be 
patentable, citing Mackay Radio & Telegraph Co. v. Radio Corp. of America, 306 U.S. 
86, 94 (1939) (“While a scientific truth, or the mathematical expression of it, is not a 
patentable invention, a novel and useful structure created with the aid of knowledge and 
scientific truth may be.”).  The Court explained that the presence of a mathematical 
formula does not preclude patentability when the structure or process is performing a 
function within the scope of the patent system, stating: 
[W]hen a claim containing a mathematical formula implements or applies 
that formula in a structure or process which, when considered as a whole, 
is performing a function which the patent laws were designed to protect 
(e.g., transforming or reducing an article to a different state or thing), then 
the claim satisfies the requirements of §101. 
 
450 U.S. at 192.  This statement’s parenthetical “e.g.” is relied on by the majority for its 
statement that Diehr requires today’s “machine-or-transformation” test.  However, this 
“e.g.” does not purport to state the only “function which the patent laws were designed 
to protect.”  Id.    This  “e.g.” indeed describes the process in Diehr, but it does not 
exclude all other processes from access to patenting. 
2007-1130 
11
 

It cannot be inferred that the Court intended, by this “e.g.” parenthetical, to 
require the far-reaching exclusions now attributed to it.  To the contrary, the Court in 
Diehr was explicit that “an application of a law of nature or mathematical formula” may 
merit patent protection, 450 U.S. at 187 (emphasis in original), and that the claimed 
process must be considered as a whole, id. at 188.  The Court recognized that a 
process claim may combine steps that were separately known, and that abstract ideas 
such as mathematical formulae may be combined with other steps to produce a 
patentable process.  Id. at 187.  The steps are not to be “dissect[ed]” into new and old 
steps; it is the entire process that frames the Section 101 inquiry.  Id. at 188. 
The Diehr Court did not hold, as the majority opinion states, that transformation 
of physical state is a requirement of eligibility set by Section 101 unless the process is 
performed by a machine.  It cannot be inferred that the Court silently imposed such a 
rule.  See maj. op. at 14 (relying on lack of repetition in Diehr of the Benson and Flook 
disclaimers of requiring machine or transformation, as an implicit rejection of these 
disclaimers and tacit adoption of the requirement).  There was no issue in Diehr of the 
need for either machine or transformation, for both were undisputedly present in the 
process of curing rubber.  It cannot be said that the Court “enunciated” today’s 
“definitive test” in Diehr.2 
Subsequent Supreme Court authority reinforced the breadth of Section 101 
 
                                            
2  
Many amici curiae pointed out that the Supreme Court did not adopt the 
test that this court now attributes to it.  See, e.g., Br. of Amicus Curiae Am. Intellectual 
Property Law Ass’n at 18 & n.16; Br. of Amicus Curiae Biotechnology Industry Org. at 
17-21; Br. of Amicus Curiae Boston Patent Law Ass’n at 6-8; Br. of Amicus Curiae 
Business Software Alliance at 13; Br. of Amicus Curiae Federal Circuit Bar Ass’n at 21; 
Br. of Amicus Curiae Regulatory Datacorp, Inc. at 12-13; Br. of Amicus Curiae 
Accenture at 16-17; Br. of Amicus Curiae Washington State Patent Law Ass’n at 10-11. 
2007-1130 
12
 

In  J.E.M. Ag Supply, Inc. v. Pioneer Hi-Bred International, Inc., 534 U.S. 124 
(2001), the Court described Section 101 as a “dynamic provision designed to 
encompass new and unforeseen inventions,” id. at 135, that case arising in the context 
of eligibility of newly developed plant varieties for patenting.  The Court stated: “As in 
Chakrabarty, we decline to narrow the reach of §101 where Congress has given us no 
indication that it intends this result.”  Id. at 145-46.  The Court reiterated that “Congress 
plainly contemplated that the patent laws would be given wide scope,” id. at 130 
(quoting Chakrabarty, 447 U.S. at 308), and that the language of Section 101 is 
“extremely broad,” id.  This is not language of restriction, and it reflects the statutory 
policy and purpose of inclusion, not exclusion, in Section 101. 
The Court’s decisions of an earlier age do not support this court’s restrictions of 
Section 101
 
 
My colleagues also find support for their restrictions on patent-eligible “process” 
inventions in the pre-Section 101 decisions O’Reilly v. Morse, 56 U.S. (15 How.) 62 
(1853), Cochrane v. Deener, 94 U.S. 780 (1876), and Tilghman v. Proctor, 102 U.S. 707 
(1880).  Although the Court in Benson and in Flook took care to state that these early 
decisions do not require the restrictions that the Court was rejecting, this court now 
places heavy reliance on these early decisions, which this court describes as 
“consistent with the machine-or-transformation test later articulated in Benson and 
reaffirmed in Diehr.”  Maj. op. at 12.  As I have discussed, no such test was “articulated 
in Benson” and “reaffirmed in Diehr.” 
However, these early cases do show, contrary to the majority opinion, that a 
“process” has always been a distinct category of patentable invention, and not tied to 
either apparatus or transformation, as this court now holds.  For example, in Tilghman v. 
2007-1130 
13
 

Proctor the Court considered a patent on a process for separating fats and oils, and 
held that the process was not restricted to any particular apparatus.  The Court held that 
a process is an independent category of invention, and stated: 
That a patent can be granted for a process, there can be no doubt.  The 
patent law is not confined to new machines and new compositions of 
matter, but extends to any new and useful art or manufacture. 
 
102 U.S. at 722; see also Corning v. Burden, 56 U.S. (15 How.) 252, 268 (1853) (“It is 
for the discovery or invention of some practical method or means of producing a 
beneficial result or effect, that a patent is granted, and not for the result or effect itself.”)  
The difference between a process and the other categories of patent-eligible subject 
matter does not deprive process inventions of the independent status accorded by 
statute, by precedent, and by logic, all of which negate the court’s new rule that a 
process must be tied to a particular machine or must transform physical matter. 
The majority also relies on O’Reilly v. Morse, citing the Court’s rejection of 
Morse’s Claim 8 for “the use of the motive power of the electro or galvanic current, 
which I call electromagnetism, however developed, for making or printing intelligible 
characters, signs or letters at any distances . . . .”  The Court explained: 
In fine he claims an exclusive right to use a manner and process which he 
has not described and indeed had not invented, and therefore could not 
describe when he obtained his patent.  The Court is of the opinion that the 
claim is too broad, and not warranted by law. 
 
56 U.S. (15 How.) at 113.  However, the claims that were directed to the communication 
system that was described by Morse were held patentable, although no machine, 
transformation, or manufacture was required.  See Morse’s Claim 5 (“The system of 
signs, consisting of dots and spaces, and horizontal lines, for numerals, letters, words, 
or sentences, substantially as herein set forth and illustrated, for telegraphic 
2007-1130 
14
 

purposes.”).  I cannot discern how the Court’s rejection of Morse’s Claim 8 on what 
would now be Section 112 grounds, or the allowance of his other claims, supports this 
court’s ruling today.  Indeed, Morse’s claim 5, to a system of signs, is no more “tangible” 
than the systems held patentable in Alappat and State Street Bank, discussed post and 
now cast into doubt, or the Bilski system here held ineligible for access to patenting. 
The majority opinion also relies on Cochrane v. Deener, particularly on certain 
words quoted in subsequent opinions of the Court.  In Cochrane the invention was a 
method for bolting flour, described as a series of mechanical steps in the processing of 
flour meal.  The question before the Court was whether the patented process would be 
infringed if the same steps were performed using different machinery.  The answer was 
“that a process may be patentable, irrespective of the particular form of the 
instrumentalities used.”  94 U.S. at 788.  The Court stressed the independence of a 
process from the tools that perform it: 
A process is a mode of treatment of certain materials to produce a given 
result.  It is an act, or series of acts, performed upon the subject-matter to 
be transformed and reduced to a different state or thing.  If new and 
useful, it is just as patentable as is a piece of machinery.  In the language 
of the patent law, it is an art.  The machinery pointed out as suitable to 
perform the process may or may not be new or patentable; whilst the 
process itself may be altogether new, and produce an entirely new result.  
The process requires that certain things should be done with certain 
substances, and in a certain order; but the tools to be used in doing this 
may be of secondary consequence. 
 
94 U.S. at 788.  The Court did not restrict the kinds of patentable processes; the issue 
in Cochrane was whether the process must be tied to the machinery that the patentee 
used to perform it. 
This court now cites Cochrane’s description of a process as “acts performed 
upon subject-matter to be transformed and reduced to a different state or thing,” id., this 
2007-1130 
15
 

court stating that unless there is transformation there is no patentable process.  That is 
not what this passage means.  In earlier opinions this court and its predecessor court 
stated the correct view of this passage, as has the Supreme Court.  The Court of 
Customs and Patent Appeals observed: 
[This Cochrane passage] has sometimes been misconstrued as a ‘rule’ or 
‘definition’ requiring that all processes, to be patentable, must operate 
physically on substances.  Such a result misapprehends the nature of the 
passage quoted as dictum, in its context, and the question being 
discussed by the author of the opinion.  To deduce such a rule from the 
statement would be contrary to its intendment which was not to limit 
process patentability but to point out that a process is not limited to the 
means used in performing it. 
 
In re Prater, 415 F.2d 1393, 1403 (C.C.P.A. 1969).  Again in In re Schrader, 22 F.3d 
290, 295 n.12 (Fed. Cir. 1994) this court noted that Cochrane did not limit patent eligible 
subject matter to physical transformation, and that transformation of “intangibles” could 
qualify for patenting.  In AT&T Corp. v. Excel Communications, Inc., 172 F.3d 1352, 
1358 (Fed. Cir. 1999), this court described physical transformation as “merely one 
example of how a mathematical algorithm may bring about a useful application.” 
The Court saw the Cochrane decision in its proper perspective.  Both Flook and 
Benson rejected the idea that Cochrane imposed the requirement of either specific 
machinery or the transformation of matter, as discussed ante.  See Flook, 437 U.S. at 
588 n.9; Benson, 409 U.S. at 71.  Non-transformative processes were not at issue in 
either Cochrane or Diehr, and there is no endorsement in Diehr of a “machine-or-
transformation” requirement for patentable processes. 
These early cases cannot be held now to require exclusion, from the Section 101 
definition of “process,” of all processes that deal with data and information, whose only 
2007-1130 
16
 

machinery is electrons, photons, or waves, or whose product is not a transformed 
physical substance. 
The English Statute of Monopolies and English common law do not limit 
“process” in Section 101 
 
I comment on this aspect in view of the proposal in the concurring opinion that 
this court’s new two-prong test for Section 101 process inventions was implicit in United 
States law starting with the Act of 1790, because of Congress’s knowledge of and 
importation of English common law and the English Statute of Monopolies of 1623.  The 
full history of patent law in England is too ambitious to be achieved within the confines 
of Bilski’s appeal,3 and the concurring opinion’s selective treatment of this history may 
propagate misunderstanding. 
The concurrence places primary reliance on the Statute of Monopolies, which 
was enacted in response to the monarchy’s grant of monopolies “to court favorites in 
goods or businesses which had long before been enjoyed by the public.”  Graham v. 
John Deere Co., 383 U.S. 1, 5 (1966) (citing Peter Meinhardt, Inventions, Patents and 
                                            
3  
Scholarly histories include M. Frumkin, The Origin of Patents, 27 J.P.O.S. 
143 (1945); E. Wyndham Hulme, Privy Council Law and Practice of Letters Patent for 
Invention from the Restoration to 1794, 33 L.Q. Rev. 63 (Part I), 180 (Part II) (1917); 
Hulme, On the History of Patent Law in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries, 18 
L.Q. Rev. 280 (1902); Hulme, The History of the Patent System Under the Prerogative 
and at Common Law, 12 L.Q. Rev. 141 (1896); Ramon A. Klitzke, Historical 
Background of the English Patent Law, 41 J.P.O.S 615 (1959); Christine MacLeod, 
Inventing the Industrial Revolution:  The English Patent System 1660-1800 (1988); 
Frank D. Prager, Historic Background and Foundation of American Patent Law, 5 Am. J. 
Legal Hist. 309 (1961); Brad Sherman & Lionel Bently, The Making of Modern 
Intellectual Property Law: The British Experience , 1760-1911 (1999); Edward C. 
Walterscheid,  The Early Evolution of the United States Patent Law:  Antecedents, 
printed serially at J. Pat. & Trademark Off. Soc’y (“J.P.T.O.S.”) 76:697 (1994) (Part 1); 
76:849 (1994) (Part 2); 77:771, 847 (1995) (Part 3); 78:77 (1996) (Part 4); 78:615 
(1996) (Part 5, part I); and 78:665 (1996) (Part 5, part II) (hereinafter “Early Evolution”); 
and Edward C. Walterscheid, To Promote the Progress of Useful Arts:  American Patent 
Law and Administration, 1798-1836 (1998). 
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Monopoly 30-35 (1946)).  The Statute of Monopolies outlawed these “odious 
monopolies” or favors of the Crown, but, contrary to the concurring opinion, the Statute 
had nothing whatever to do with narrowing or eliminating categories of inventive subject 
matter eligible for a British patent.  See Prager, Historical Background and Foundation 
of American Patent Law, 5 Am. J. Legal Hist. at 313 (“The statute [of Monopolies] said 
nothing about meritorious functions of patents, nothing about patent disclosures, and 
nothing about patent procedures; it was only directed against patent abuses.”). 
Patents for inventions had been granted by the Crown long before 1623.  See 
Hulme, The History of the Patent System Under the Prerogative and at Common Law, 
12 L.Q. Rev. at 143 (the first patent grant to the “introducer of a newly-invented 
process” was in 1440); Klitzke, Historical Background of the English Patent Law, 41 
J.P.O.S. at 626-27 (discussing first patents for “invention” in England in the fifteenth 
century).  That practice was unaffected by the terms of the Statute of Monopolies, which 
rendered “utterly void” all “Monopolies and all Commissions, Grants, Licenses, Charters 
and Letters Patent” that were directed to “the sole Buying, Selling, Making, Working or 
Using any Thing within this Realm,” 21 Jac. 1, c.3, §I (Eng.), but which specifically 
excepted Letters Patent for inventions from that exclusion, id. §VI.  The only new 
limitation on patents for invention was a fourteen-year limit on the term of exclusivity.  
See Klitzke, Historical Background of the English Patent Law, 41 J.P.O.S. at 649. 
The usage “Letters Patent” described one of the forms of document whereby the 
Crown granted various rights, whether the grant was for an odious monopoly that the 
Statute of Monopolies eliminated, or for rights to an invention new to England.  That 
usage was not changed by the Statute of Monopolies.  Nor were other aspects of the 
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British practice which differed from that enacted in the United States, particularly the 
aspect whereby a British patent could be granted to a person who imported something 
that was new to England, whether or not the import was previously known or the 
importer was the inventor thereof.  In England, “[t]he rights of the inventor are derived 
from those of the importer, and not vice versa as is commonly supposed.”  Hulme, The 
History of the Patent System Under the Prerogative and at Common Law, 12 L.Q.R. at 
152; see also MacLeod, Inventing the Industrial Revolution 13 (“The rights of the first 
inventor were understood to derive from those of the first importer of the invention.”). 
In contrast, in the United States the patent right has never been predicated upon 
importation, and has never been limited to “manufactures.”  See, e.g., Walterscheid, To 
Promote the Progress of Useful Arts 93, 137-38, 224; see also Prager, Historic 
Background and Foundation of American Patent Law, 5 Am. J. Legal Hist. at 309 (“The 
American Revolution destroyed many of the ancient customs; it brought a sweeping 
reorientation of patent law, with new forms, new rules, new concepts, and new ideals.”).  
The differences between the American and English patent law at this nation’s founding 
were marked, and English judicial decisions interpreting the English statute are of 
limited use in interpreting the United States statute.  In all events, no English decision 
supports this court’s new restrictive definition of “process.” 
The concurrence proposes that the Statute of Monopolies provides a binding 
definition of the terms “manufacture,” “machine,” “composition of matter,” and “process” 
in Section 101 of the U.S. Patent Act.  See concurring op. at 5-8.  The only one of these 
terms that appears in the Statute of Monopolies is “manufacture”, a broad term that 
reflects the usage of the period.  Even at the time of this country’s founding, the usage 
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was broad, as set forth in Samuel Johnson’s Dictionary of the English Language (3d. 
ed. 1768), which defines “manufacture” as “any thing made by art,” and defines “art” as 
“the power of doing something not taught by nature and instinct”; “a science”; “a trade”; 
“artfulness”; “skill”; “dexterity.”  Historians explain that England’s primary motive for 
patenting was to promote “[a]cquisition of superior Continental technology” at a time 
when England lagged behind, see MacLeod, Inventing the Industrial Revolution 11; this 
cannot be interpreted to mean that England and perforce the United States intended to 
eliminate “processes” from this incentive system.  It is inconceivable that on this 
background the Framers, and again the enactors of the first United States patent 
statutes in 1790 and 1793, intended sub silentio to impose the limitations on “process” 
now created by this court. 
Congress’ earliest known draft patent bill included the terms “art, manufacture, 
engine, machine, invention or device, or any improvement upon the same.” 
 
Walterscheid, To Promote the Progress of Useful Arts 92.  The 1793 Act explicitly 
stated “any new and useful art,” §1, 1 Stat. 318 (1793), a usage that was carried 
forward until “art” was replaced with “process” in 35 U.S.C. §101 and defined in §100(b).  
Historians discuss that Congress’ inclusion of any “art” or “process” in the patent system 
was a deliberate clarification of the English practice.  See Walterscheid, To Promote the 
Progress of Useful Arts 93 (“[The first patent bill] appears to be an obvious attempt to 
deal legislatively with issues that were beginning to be addressed by the English 
courts. . . . [I]t  states  unequivocally  that  improvement inventions are patentable and 
expands the definition of invention or discovery beyond simply ‘manufacture.’”); Karl B. 
Lutz, Patents and Science:  A Clarification of the Patent Clause of the U.S. Constitution, 
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32 J.P.O.S. 83, 86 (1950) (“By the year 1787 it was being recognized even in Great 
Britain that the phrase ‘new manufactures’ was an unduly limited object for a patent 
system, since it seems to exclude new processes. . . . [This question was] resolved in 
the United States Constitution by broadening the field from ‘new manufactures’ to 
‘useful arts’ . . . .”). 
In interpreting a statute, it is the language selected by Congress that occupies 
center stage:  “[O]ur obligation is to take statutes as we find them, guided, if ambiguity 
appears, by the legislative history and statutory purpose.”  Chakrabarty, 447 U.S. at 
315.  The Court has “perceive[d] no ambiguity” in Section 101, leaving no need for 
foreign assistance.  Id.  The legislative choice to afford the patent system “wide scope,” 
id. at 308, including “process” inventions, evolved in the United States independent of 
later developments of the common law in England. 
The concurrence concludes that the Statute of Monopolies foreclosed the future 
patenting of anything that the concurrence calls a “business method”—the term is not 
defined—whether or not the method is new, inventive, and useful.  But the Statute of 
Monopolies only foreclosed “odious” monopolies, illustrated by historical reports that 
Queen Elizabeth had granted monopolies on salt, ale, saltpeter, white soap, dredging 
machines, playing cards, and rape seed oil, and on processes and services such as 
Spanish leather-making, mining of various metals and ores, dying and dressing cloth, 
and iron tempering.  See Walterscheid, Early Evolution (Part 2), 76 J.P.T.O.S. at 854 
n.14; Klitzke, Historical Background of the English Patent Law, 41 J.P.O.S. at 634-35.  
These and other grants, many of which were implemented by Letters Patent, were the 
“odious monopolies” that were rendered illegal.  They included several classes of known 
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activity, product and process, and had nothing to do with new “inventions.”  The Statute 
of Monopolies cannot be held to have restricted the kinds of new processes that can 
today be eligible for patenting in the United States, merely because it outlawed patents 
on non-novel businesses in England.  The presence or absence of “organizing human 
activity,” a vague term created by the concurrence, has no connection or relevance to 
Parliament’s elimination of monopoly patronage grants for old, established arts.  The 
Statute of Monopolies neither excluded nor included inventions that involve human 
activity, although the words “the sole working or making in any manner of new 
manufactures” presuppose human activity.  21 Jac. 1, c.3, §VI (emphases added).  We 
are directed to no authority for the proposition that a new and inventive process 
involving “human activity” has historically been treated differently from other processes; 
indeed, most inventions involve human activity. 
The concurrence has provided hints of the complexity of the evolution of patent 
law in England, as in the United States, as the Industrial Revolution took hold.  
Historians have recognized these complexities.  See, e.g., Walterscheid, To Promote 
the Progress of Useful Arts 5 (“[T]he American patent law almost from its inception 
departed from its common law counterpart in the interpretation that would be given to 
the definition of novelty . . . .”); Klitzke, Historical Background of the English Patent Law, 
41 J.P.O.S. at 638 (noting that in Elizabethan times, novelty only required a showing 
that “the industry had not been carried on within the realm within a reasonable period of 
time, while today “the proof of a single public sale of an article” or a “printed publication” 
can negate patentability). 
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I caution against over-simplification, particularly in view of the uncertainties in 
English common law at the time of this country’s founding.  See Boulton v. Bull, 2 H. Bl. 
463, 491 (C.P. 1795) (Eyre, C.J.) (“Patent rights are no where that I can find accurately 
discussed in our books.”); MacLeod, Inventing the Industrial Revolution 61 (“It was only 
from the time when the Privy Council relinquished jurisdiction that a case law on patents 
began to develop. . . . But it was a slow process and even the spate of hard-fought 
patent cases at the end of the eighteenth century did little to establish a solid core of 
judicial wisdom.”).  The English judicial opinions of the eighteenth century were not as 
limiting on the United States as my colleagues suggest.  See Walterscheid, The Nature 
of the Intellectual Property Clause: A Study in Historical Perspective 355 (2002) (“In the 
eighteenth century, patentees and those who gave advice concerning patents were 
certainly of the view that the Statute did not preclude the patenting of general principles 
of operation.”); see also MacLeod, Inventing the Industrial Revolution 63-64. 
It is reported that in the century and a half following enactment of the Statute of 
Monopolies, the English patent registers were replete with inventions claimed as 
“processes.”  See Walterscheid, Early Evolution (Part 3), 77 J.P.T.O.S. at 856 (“As one 
of the earliest texts on the patent law stated in 1806: ‘most of the patents now taken out, 
are by name, for the method of doing particular things . . . .”).  The concurrence agrees; 
but it is also reported that because patents were not litigated in the common law courts 
until the Privy Council authorized such suits in 1752, judicial interpretation of various 
aspects of patent law were essentially absent until about the time this country achieved 
independence, leading to the variety of views expressed in Boulton v. Bull.  The 
legislators in the new United States cannot now be assigned the straightjacket of law 
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not yet developed in England.  Indeed, the first patent granted by President 
Washington, upon examination by Secretary of State Jefferson, was for a method of 
“making Pot-ash and Pearl-ash,” a process patent granted during the period that the 
concurrence states was fraught with English uncertainty about process patents.  See 
The First United States Patent, 36 J.P.O.S. 615, 616-17 (1954). 
The concurrence lists some English process patents predating the United States’ 
1793 Patent Act, and argues that processes not sufficiently “like” these archaic 
inventions should not now be eligible for patenting.  I refer simply to Flook, 437 U.S. at 
588 n.9, where the Court stated: “As in Benson, we assume that a valid process patent 
may issue even if it does not meet one of the qualifications of our earlier precedents.”  
Similarly, the Chakrabarty Court stated: “[A] statute is not to be confined to the particular 
applications . . . contemplated by the legislators.  This is especially true in the field of 
patent law.”  Chakrabarty, 447 U.S. at 315-16 (citing Barr v. United States, 324 U.S. 83, 
90 (1945); Browder v. United States, 312 U.S. 335, 339 (1941); Puerto Rico v. Shell 
Co., 302 U.S. 253, 257 (1937)).  The meaning of the statutory term “process” is not 
limited by particular examples from more than two hundred years ago. 
However, I cannot resist pointing to the “business method” patents on 
Woodcroft’s list.  See concurring op. at 15 (citing No. 1197 to John Knox (July 21, 1778) 
(“Plan for assurances on lives of persons from 10 to 80 years of age.”)).  Several other 
process patents on Woodcroft’s list appear to involve financial subject matter, and to 
require primarily human activity.  See, e.g., No. 1170 to John Molesworth (Sept. 29, 
1777) (“Securing to the purchasers of shares and chances of state-lottery tickets any 
prize drawn in their favor.”); No. 1159 to William Nicholson (July 14, 1777) (“Securing 
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the property of persons purchasing shares of State-lottery tickets.”), cited in Bennet 
Woodcroft, Alphabetical Index of Patentees of Inventions 383, 410 (U.S. ed. 1969).  
Other English process patents from the several decades following 1793 can aptly be 
described as “business methods,” although not performed with the aid of computers.  
E.g., No. 10,367 to George Robert D’Harcourt (Oct. 29, 1844) (“Ascertaining and 
checking the number of checks or tickets which have been used and marked, applicable 
for railway officers.”). 
While most patents of an earlier era reflect the dominant mechanical and 
chemical technologies of that era, modern processes reflect the dramatic advances in 
telecommunications and computing that have occurred since the time of George III.  
See USPTO White Paper, Automated Financial or Management Data Processing 
Methods (Business Methods) 4 (2000), available at 
http://www.uspto.gov/web/menu/busmethp/whitepaper.pdf  (hereinafter USPTO White 
Paper) (“The full arrival of electricity as a component in business data processing 
system[s] was a watershed event.”).  It is apparent that economic, or “business 
method,” or “human activity” patents were neither explicitly nor implicitly foreclosed from 
access to the English patent system. 
Evolution of process patents in the United States 
The United States’ history of patenting establishes the same point.  The PTO has 
located various patents predating modern computer usages that can be described as 
financial or business methods.  The USPTO White Paper at 3-4 and appendix A 
describes the history of financial apparatus and method patents dating back to 1799, 
including patents on bank notes, bills of credit, bills of exchange, check blanks, 
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detecting and preventing counterfeiting, coin counting, interest calculation tables, and 
lotteries, all within the first fifty years of the United States patent system.  It is a 
distortion of these patents to describe the processes as “tied to” another statutory 
category—that is, paper and pencil.  Concurring op. at 16-17 & n.18.  Replacement of 
paper with a computer screen, and pencil with electrons, does not “untie” the process.  
Fairly considered, the many older financial and business-oriented patents that the PTO 
and many of the amici have identified are of the same type as the Bilski claims; they 
were surely not rendered patent-eligible solely because they used “paper” to instantiate 
the financial strategies and transactions that comprised their contribution. 
I do not disagree with the general suggestion that statutes intended to codify the 
existing common law are to be interpreted in light of then-contemporary practice, 
including, if relevant, the English cases.  See concurring op. at 12-13.  However, the 
court must be scrupulous in assessing the relevance of decisions that were formulated 
on particularized facts involving the technology of the period.  The United States 
Supreme Court has never held that “process” inventions suffered a second-class status 
under our statutes, achieving patent eligibility only derivatively through an explicit “tie” to 
another statutory category.  The Court has repeatedly disparaged efforts to read in 
restrictions not based on statutory language.  See Diehr, 450 U.S. at 182; Chakrabarty, 
447 U.S. at 308.  Yet second-class status is today engrafted on “process” inventions.  
There is plainly no basis for such restriction, which is a direct path to the “gloomy 
thought” that concerned Senator O.H. Platt in his Remarks in Congress at the 
Centennial Proceedings of the United States Patent System: 
For one, I cannot entertain the gloomy thought that we have come to that 
century in the world’s life in which new and grander achievements are 
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impossible. . . . Invention is a prolific mother; every inventive triumph 
stimulates new effort.  Man never is and never will be content with 
success, and the great secrets of nature are as yet largely undiscovered. 
 
Invention and Advancement (1891), reprinted in United States Bicentennial 
Commemorative Edition of Proceedings and Addresses: Celebration of the Beginning of 
the Second Century of the American Patent System 75-76 (1990). 
In sum, history does not support the retrogression sponsored by the 
concurrence. 
This court now rejects its own CCPA and Federal Circuit precedent 
 
The majority opinion holds that there is a Supreme Court restriction on process 
patents, “enunciated” in Benson, Flook, and Diehr; and that this restriction was 
improperly ignored by the Federal Circuit and the Court of Customs and Patent 
Appeals, leading us into error which we must now correct.  Thus this court announces 
that our prior decisions may no longer be relied upon.  Maj. op. at 19-20 & nn.17, 19.  
The effect on the patents and businesses that did rely on them is not considered. 
The Court’s decisions in Benson, Flook, and Diehr all reached the Supreme 
Court by way of the CCPA, and the CCPA successively implemented the Court’s 
guidance in establishing the Freeman/Walter/Abele test for eligibility under Section 101.  
The Federal Circuit continued to consider computer-facilitated processes, as in 
Arrhythmia Research Technology, 958 F.2d at 1059-60, where patent-eligibility was 
confirmed for a computer-assisted mathematical analysis of electrocardiograph signals 
that determined the likelihood of recurrence of heart attack.  This court now rules that 
this precedent “should no longer be relied on.”  Maj. op. at 19 n.17. 
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In In re Alappat, 33 F.3d 1526 (Fed. Cir. 1994) (en banc) the question was the 
eligibility for patent of a rasterizer that mathematically transforms data to eliminate 
aliasing in a digital oscilloscope.  The court held that a computer-implemented system 
that produces a “useful, concrete, and tangible result” is Section 101 subject matter.  Id. 
at 1544.  This court now rules that “a ‘useful, concrete and tangible result’ analysis 
should no longer be relied on.”  Maj. op. at 20 n.19. 
The Alappat court stressed the intent, embodied in the language of the statute, 
that the patent system be broadly available to new and useful inventions: 
The use of the expansive term “any” in §101 represents Congress’s intent 
not to place any restrictions on the subject matter for which a patent may 
be obtained beyond those specifically recited in §101 and other parts of 
Title 35. 
 
33 F.3d at 1542.  This court looked to the Supreme Court’s guidance in its Section 101 
decisions, and explained: 
A close analysis of Diehr, Flook, and Benson reveals that the Supreme 
Court never intended to create an overly broad, fourth category of 
[mathematical] subject matter excluded from §101.  Rather, at the core of 
the Court’s analysis in each of these cases lies an attempt by the Court to 
explain a rather straightforward concept, namely, that certain types of 
mathematical subject matter, standing alone, represent nothing more than 
abstract ideas until reduced to some type of practical application, and thus 
that subject matter is not, in and of itself, entitled to patent protection. 
 
Id. at 1543 (emphasis in original).  The court cited the Supreme Court’s distinction 
between abstract ideas and their practical application, and stated of the claimed 
rasterizer: “This is not a disembodied mathematical concept which may be 
characterized as an ‘abstract idea,’ but rather a specific machine to produce a useful, 
concrete, and tangible result.”  Id. at 1544. 
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This principle was applied to a computer-implemented data processing system 
for managing pooled mutual fund assets in State Street Bank & Trust Co. v. Signature 
Financial Group, Inc., 149 F.3d 1368 (Fed. Cir. 1998), and to a method for recording 
and processing telephone data in AT&T v. Excel.  The court explained that processes 
that include mathematical calculations in a practical application can produce a useful, 
concrete, and tangible result, which in State Street Bank was “expressed in numbers, 
such as price, profit, percentage, cost, or loss.”  149 F.3d at 1375.  In AT&T v. Excel the 
court applied State Street Bank and Diehr, and stated that “physical transformation . . . 
is not an invariable requirement, but merely one example of how a mathematical 
algorithm may bring about a useful application” and thus achieve a useful, concrete, and 
tangible result.  172 F.3d at 1358.  This analysis, too, can no longer be relied on.  Maj. 
op. at 20 n.19. 
The now-discarded criterion of a “useful, concrete, and tangible result” has 
proved to be of ready and comprehensible applicability in a large variety of processes of 
the information and digital ages.  The court in State Street Bank reinforced the thesis 
that there is no reason, in statute or policy, to exclude computer-implemented and 
information-based inventions from access to patentability.  The holdings and reasoning 
of Alappat and State Street Bank guided the inventions of the electronic age into the 
patent system, while remaining faithful to the Diehr distinction between abstract ideas 
such as mathematical formulae and their application in a particular process for a 
specified purpose.  And patentability has always required compliance with all of the 
requirements of the statute, including novelty, non-obviousness, utility, and the 
provisions of Section 112. 
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The public has relied on the rulings of this court and of the Supreme Court 
 
The decisions in Alappat and State Street Bank confirmed the patent eligibility of 
many evolving areas of commerce, as inventors and investors explored new 
technological capabilities.  The public and the economy have experienced extraordinary 
advances in information-based and computer-managed processes, supported by an 
enlarging patent base.  The PTO reports that in Class 705, the examination 
classification associated with “business methods” and most likely to receive inventions 
that may not use machinery or transform physical matter, there were almost 10,000 
patent applications filed in FY 2006 alone, and over 40,000 applications filed since FY 
98 when State Street Bank was decided.  See Wynn W. Coggins, USPTO, Update on 
Business Methods for the Business Methods Partnership Meeting 6 (2007) (hereinafter 
“PTO Report”), available at http://www.uspto.gov/web/menu/pbmethod/partnership.pps.  
An amicus in the present case reports that over 15,000 patents classified in Class 705 
have issued.  See Br. of Amicus Curiae Accenture, at 22 n.20.4  The industries 
identified with information-based and data-handling processes, as several amici curiae 
explain and illustrate, include fields as diverse as banking and finance, insurance, data 
processing, industrial engineering, and medicine. 
Stable law, on which industry can rely, is a foundation of commercial advance 
into new products and processes.  Inventiveness in the computer and information 
services fields has placed the United States in a position of technological and 
commercial preeminence.  The information technology industry is reported to be “the 
                                            
4  
The PTO recognizes that patents on “business methods” have been 
eligible subject matter for two centuries.  See USPTO White Paper 2 (“Financial patents 
in the paper-based technologies have been granted continuously for over two hundred 
years.”). 
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key factor responsible for reversing the 20-year productivity slow-down from the mid-
1970s to the mid-1990s and in driving today’s robust productivity growth.”  R.D. 
Atkinson & A.S. McKay, Digital Prosperity:  Understanding the Economic Benefits of the 
Information Technology Revolution 10 (Info. Tech. & Innovation Found. 2007), available 
at http://www.itif.org/files/digital_prosperity.pdf.  By revenue estimates, in 2005 the 
software and information sectors constituted the fourth largest industry in the United 
States, with significantly faster growth than the overall U.S. economy.  Software & Info. 
Indus. Ass’n, Software and Information: Driving the Knowledge Economy 7-8 (2008), 
http://www.siia.net/estore/globecon-08.pdf.  A Congressional Report in 2006 stated: 
As recently as 1978, intangible assets, such as intellectual property, 
accounted for 20 percent of corporate assets with the vast majority of 
value (80 percent) attributed to tangible assets such as facilities and 
equipment.  By 1997, the trend reversed; 73 percent of corporate assets 
were intangible and only 27 percent were tangible. 
 
H.R. Rep. No. 109-673 (accompanying a bill concerning judicial resources). 
This powerful economic move toward “intangibles” is a challenge to the 
backward-looking change of this court’s ruling today.  Until the shift represented by 
today’s decision, statute and precedent have provided stability in the rapidly moving and 
commercially vibrant fields of the Information Age.  Despite the economic importance of 
these interests, the consequences of our decision have not been considered.  I don’t 
know how much human creativity and commercial activity will be devalued by today’s 
change in law; but neither do my colleagues. 
The Section 101 interpretation that is now uprooted has the authority of years of 
reliance, and ought not be disturbed absent the most compelling reasons. 
 
“Considerations of stare decisis have special force in the area of statutory interpretation, 
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for here, unlike in the context of constitutional interpretation, the legislative power is 
implicated, and Congress remains free to alter what [the courts] have done.”  Shepard 
v. United States, 544 U.S. 13, 23 (2005) (quoting Patterson v. McLean Credit Union, 
491 U.S. 164, 172-73 (1989)); see also Hilton v. S.C. Pub. Res. Comm’n, 502 U.S. 197, 
205 (1991) (in cases of statutory interpretation the importance of adhering to prior 
rulings is “most compelling”).  Where, as here, Congress has not acted to modify the 
statute in the many years since Diehr and the decisions of this court, the force of stare 
decisis is even stronger.  See Shepard, 544 U.S. at 23. 
Adherence to settled law, resulting in settled expectations, is of particular 
importance “in cases involving property and contract rights, where reliance interests are 
involved.”  Payne v. Tennessee, 501 U.S. 808, 828 (1991); see also United States v. 
Title Ins. & Trust Co., 265 U.S. 472, 486 (1924) (declining to overrule precedent where 
prior ruling “has become a rule of property, and to disturb it now would be fraught with 
many injurious results”).  This rationale is given no weight by my colleagues, as this 
court gratuitously disrupts decades of law underlying our own rulings.  The only 
announced support for today’s change appears to be the strained new reading of 
Supreme Court quotations.  But this court has previously read these decades-old 
opinions differently, without objection by either Congress or the Court.  My colleagues 
do not state a reason for their change of heart.  See  Benjamin N. Cardozo, The Nature 
of the Judicial Process 149 (1921) (“[T]he labor of judges would be increased almost to 
the breaking point if every past decision could be reopened in every case, and one 
could not lay one’s own course of bricks on the secure foundation of the courses laid by 
others who had gone before him.”). 
2007-1130 
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It is the legislature’s role to change the law if the public interest so requires.  In 
Chakrabarty the Court stated: “The choice we are urged to make is a matter of high 
policy for resolution within the legislative process after the kind of investigation, 
examination, and study that legislative bodies can provide and courts cannot.”  447 U.S. 
at 317; see also Flook, 437 U.S. 595 (“Difficult questions of policy concerning the kinds 
of programs that may be appropriate for patent protection and the form and duration of 
such protection can be answered by Congress on the basis of current empirical data not 
equally available to this tribunal.”). 
It is, however, the judicial obligation to assure a correct, just, and reliable judicial 
process, and particularly to respect the principles of stare decisis in an area in which 
prior and repeated statutory interpretations have been relied upon by others.  See, e.g., 
Shepard, 544 U.S. at 23 (“[T]he claim to adhere to case law is generally powerful once 
a decision has settled statutory meaning.”); Hilton, 502 U.S. at 202 (“Adherence to 
precedent promotes stability, predictability, and respect for judicial authority.”); Payne, 
501 U.S. at 827 (“Stare decisis is the preferred course because it promotes the 
evenhanded, predictable, and consistent development of legal principles, fosters 
reliance on judicial decisions, and contributes to the actual and perceived integrity of the 
judicial process.”).  These considerations appear to be abandoned. 
Uncertain guidance for the future 
Not only past expectations, but future hopes, are disrupted by uncertainty as to 
application of the new restrictions on patent eligibility.  For example, the court states 
that even if a process is “tied to” a machine or transforms matter, the machine or 
transformation must impose “meaningful limits” and cannot constitute “insignificant 
2007-1130 
33
 

extra-solution activity”.  Maj. op. at 24.  We are advised that transformation must be 
“central to the purpose of the claimed process,” id., although we are not told what kinds 
of transformations may qualify, id. at 25-26.  These concepts raise new conflicts with 
precedent. 
This court and the Supreme Court have stated that “there is no legally 
recognizable or protected ‘essential’ element, ‘gist’ or ‘heart’ of the invention in a 
combination patent.”  Allen Eng’g Corp. v. Bartell Industries, Inc., 299 F.3d 1336, 1345 
(Fed. Cir. 2002) (quoting Aro Mfg. Co. v. Convertible Top Replacement Co., 365 U.S. 
336, 345 (1961)).  This rule applies with equal force to process patents, see W.L. Gore 
& Associates, Inc. v. Garlock, Inc., 721 F.2d 1540, 1548 (Fed. Cir. 1983) (there is no 
gist of the invention rule for process patents), and is in accord with the rule that the 
invention must be considered as a whole, rather than “dissected,” in assessing its 
patent eligibility under Section 101, see Diehr, 450 U.S. at 188.  It is difficult to predict 
an adjudicator’s view of the “invention as a whole,” now that patent examiners and 
judges are instructed to weigh the different process components for their “centrality” and 
the “significance” of their “extra-solution activity” in a Section 101 inquiry. 
As for whether machine implementation will impose “meaningful limits in a 
particular case,” the “meaningfulness” of computer usage in the great variety of 
technical and informational subject matter that is computer-facilitated is apparently now 
a flexible parameter of Section 101.  Each patent examination center, each trial court, 
each panel of this court, will have a blank slate on which to uphold or invalidate claims 
based on whether there are sufficient “meaningful limits”, or whether a transformation is 
adequately “central,” or the “significance” of process steps.  These qualifiers, appended 
2007-1130 
34
 

to a novel test which itself is neither suggested nor supported by statutory text, 
legislative history, or judicial precedent, raise more questions than they answer.  These 
new standards add delay, uncertainty, and cost, but do not add confidence in reliable 
standards for Section 101. 
Other aspects of the changes of law also contribute uncertainty.  We aren’t told 
when, or if, software instructions implemented on a general purpose computer are 
deemed “tied” to a “particular machine,” for if Alappat’s guidance that software converts 
a general purpose computer into a special purpose machine remains applicable, there 
is no need for the present ruling.  For the thousands of inventors who obtained patents 
under the court’s now-discarded criteria, their property rights are now vulnerable. 
The court also avoids saying whether the State Street Bank and AT&T v. Excel 
inventions would pass the new test.  The drafting of claims in machine or process form 
was not determinative in those cases, for “we consider the scope of §101 to be the 
same regardless of the form—machine or process—in which a particular claim is 
drafted.”  AT&T v. Excel, 172 F.3d at 1357.  From either the machine or the 
transformation viewpoint, the processing of data representing “price, profit, percentage, 
cost, or loss” in State Street Bank is not materially different from the processing of the 
Bilski data representing commodity purchase and sale prices, market transactions, and 
risk positions; yet Bilski is held to fail our new test, while State Street is left hanging.  
The uncertainty is illustrated in the contemporaneous decision of In re Comiskey, 499 
F.3d 1365, 1378-79 (Fed. Cir. 2007), where the court held that “systems that depend for 
their operation on human intelligence alone” to solve practical problems are not within 
the scope of Section 101; and In re Nuijten, 500 F.3d 1346, 1353-54 (Fed. Cir. 2007), 
2007-1130 
35
 

where the court held that claims to a signal with an embedded digital watermark 
encoded according to a given encoding process were not directed to statutory subject 
matter under Section 101, although the claims included “physical but transitory forms of 
signal transmission such as radio broadcasts, electrical signals through a wire, and light 
pluses through a fiber-optic cable.” 
Although this uncertainty may invite some to try their luck in court, the wider 
effect will be a disincentive to innovation-based commerce.  For inventors, investors, 
competitors, and the public, the most grievous consequence is the effect on inventions 
not made or not developed because of uncertainty as to patent protection.  Only the 
successes need the patent right. 
The Bilski invention has not been examined for patentability 
To be patentable, Bilski’s invention must be novel and non-obvious, and the 
specification and claims must meet the requirements of enablement, description, 
specificity, best mode, etc.  See 35 U.S.C. §101 (“Whoever invents or discovers a new 
and useful process . . . may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the conditions and 
requirements of this title.”); Diehr, 490 U.S. at 190 (the question of whether an invention 
is novel is distinct from whether the subject matter is statutory); State Street Bank, 149 
F.3d at 1377 (“Whether the patent’s claims are too broad to be patentable is not to be 
judged under §101, but rather under §§102, 103, and 112.”).  I don’t know whether 
Bilski can meet these requirements—but neither does this court, for the claims have not 
been examined for patentability, and no rejections apart from Section 101 are included 
in this appeal. 
2007-1130 
36
 

Instead, the court states the “true issue before us” is “whether Applicants are 
seeking to claim a fundamental principle (such as an abstract idea) or mental process,” 
maj. op. at 7, and answers “yes.”  With respect, that is the wrong question, and the 
wrong answer.  Bilski’s patent application describes his process of analyzing the effects 
of supply and demand on commodity prices and the use of a coupled transaction 
strategy to hedge against these risks; this is not a fundamental principle or an abstract 
idea; it is not a mental process or a law of nature.  It is a “process,” set out in successive 
steps, for obtaining and analyzing information and carrying out a series of commercial 
transactions for the purpose of “managing the consumption risk costs of a commodity 
sold by a commodity provider at a fixed price.”  Claim 1, preamble. 
Because the process Bilski describes employs complex mathematical 
calculations to assess various elements of risk, any practicable embodiment would be 
conducted with the aid of a machine—a programmed computer—but the court holds 
that since computer-implementation is not recited in claim 1, for that reason alone the 
process fails the “machine” part of the court’s machine-or-transformation test.  Maj. op. 
at 24.  And the court holds that since Bilski’s process involves the processing of data 
concerning commodity prices and supply and demand and other risk factors, the 
process fails the “transformation” test because no “physical objects or substances” are 
transformed.  Maj. op. at 28-29.  The court then concludes that because Bilski’s Claim 1 
fails the machine-or-transformation test it ipso facto preempts a “fundamental principle” 
and is thereby barred from the patent system under Section 101: an illogical leap that 
displays the flaws in the court’s analysis. 
2007-1130 
37
 

If a claim is unduly broad, or if it fails to include sufficient specificity, the 
appropriate ground of rejection is Section 112, for claims must “particularly point out and 
distinctly claim[]” the invention.  See In re Vaeck, 947 F.2d 488, 495-96 (Fed. Cir. 1991) 
(affirming rejection under Section 112 where “[t]here is no reasonable correlation 
between the narrow disclosure in applicant’s specification and the broad scope of 
protection sought in the claims”); In re Foster, 438 F.2d 1011, 1016 (C.C.P.A. 1971) 
(claims “not commensurate with appellants’ own definition of what they are seeking to 
cover” are rejected under Section 112, rather than Section 101); In re Prater, 415 F.2d 
at 1403-04 (applying Section 112 to claims that included mental steps).  The filing of a 
broader claim than is supported in the specification does not convert the invention into 
an abstraction and evict the application from eligibility for examination.  A broad first 
claim in a patent application is routine; it is not the crisis event postulated in the court’s 
opinion. 
The role of examination is to determine the scope of the claims to which the 
applicant is entitled.  See 37 C.F.R. §1.104(a).  The PTO’s regulations provide: 
On taking up an application for examination or a patent in a reexamination 
proceeding, the examiner shall make a thorough study thereof and shall 
make a thorough investigation of the available prior art relating to the 
subject matter of the claimed invention.  The examination shall be 
complete with respect to both compliance of the application or patent 
under reexamination with the applicable statutes and rules and to the 
patentability of the invention as claimed, as well as with respect to matters 
of form, unless otherwise indicated. 
 
Id. §1.104(a)(1).  The Manual of Patent Examining Procedure (MPEP) similarly instructs 
the examiners to conduct a “thorough search of the prior art” before evaluating the 
invention under Section 101.  MPEP §2106(III) (8th ed., rev. 7, July. 2008) (“Prior to 
evaluating the claimed invention under 35 U.S.C. §101, USPTO personnel are expected 
2007-1130 
38
 

to conduct a thorough search of the prior art.”).  The MPEP also requires examiners to 
identify all grounds of rejection in the first official PTO action to avoid unnecessary 
delays in examination.  Id. §2106(II) (“Under the principles of compact prosecution, 
each claim should be reviewed for compliance with every statutory requirement for 
patentability in the initial review of the application, even if one or more claims are found 
to be deficient with respect to some statutory requirement.”).  I note that this 
requirement does not appear to have been here met. 
Several amici curiae referred to the difficulties that the PTO has reported in 
examining patents in areas where the practice has been to preserve secrecy, for 
published prior art is sparse.  The Federal Trade Commission recognized that the 
problem of “questionable” patents stems mostly from “the difficulty patent examiners 
can have in considering all the relevant prior art in the field and staying informed about 
the rapid advance of computer science.”  FTC, To Promote Innovation: The Proper 
Balance of Competition & Patent Law and Policy at ch. 3, pp. 44 (Oct. 2003), available 
at http://www.ftc.gov/os/2003/10/innovationrpt.pdf.  However, this problem seems to be 
remedied, for the PTO reported in 2007 that for Class 705, “[t]he cases the examiners 
are now working on have noticeably narrower claims” than the cases filed in or before 
FY 2000.  PTO Report at 9.  The PTO reports that its search fields have been enlarged, 
staff added, and supervision augmented.  FTC Report at ch. 1, p. 30.  (“Since the PTO 
introduced [these changes] the allowance rate for business method patents has 
decreased, and the PTO believes that this decreased allowance rate indicates improved 
PTO searches for prior art.”).  If this court’s purpose now is to improve the quality of 
2007-1130 
39
 

issued patents by eliminating access to patenting for large classes of past, present, and 
future inventions, the remedy would appear to be excessive. 
A straightforward, efficient, and ultimately fair approach to the evaluation of “new 
and useful” processes—quoting Section 101—is to recognize that a process invention 
that is not clearly a “fundamental truth, law of nature, or abstract idea” is eligible for 
examination for patentability.  I do not suggest that basic scientific discoveries are a 
proper subject matter of patents (the Court in Chakrabarty mentioned E=mc2 and the 
law of gravity), and I do not attempt an all-purpose definition of the boundary between 
scientific theory and technological application.  But it is rare indeed that a question 
arises at the boundary of basic science; more usual is the situation illustrated by 
Samuel Morse’s telegraph, in which the Court simply held that Morse’s general claim 
was “too broad,” exceeding the scope of his practical application. 
Bilski’s process for determining risk in commodity transactions does not become 
an abstraction because it is broadly claimed in his first claim.  It may be claimed so 
broadly that it reads on the prior art, but it is neither a fundamental truth nor an 
abstraction.  Bilski’s ten other claims contain further details and limitations, removing 
them farther from abstraction.  Although claim 1 may have been deemed 
“representative” with respect to Section 101, the differences among the claims may be 
significant with respect to Sections 102, 103, and 112.  Bilski’s application, now pending 
for eleven years, has yet to be examined for patentability. 
CONCLUSION 
In sum, the text of Section 101, its statutory history, its interpretation by the 
Supreme Court, and its application by the courts, contravene this court's redefinition of 
2007-1130 
40
 

the statutory term “process.”  The court’s decision affects present and future rights and 
incentives, and usurps the legislative role.  The judicial role is to support stability and 
predictability in the law, with fidelity to statue and precedent, and respect for the 
principles of stare decisis. 
Patents provide an incentive to invest in and work in new directions.  In United 
States v. Line Materials Co., 333 U.S. 287, 332 (1948), Justice Burton, joined by Chief 
Justice Vinson and Justice Frankfurter, remarked that “the frontiers of science have 
expanded until civilization now depends largely upon discoveries on those frontiers to 
meet the infinite needs of the future.  The United States, thus far, has taken a leading 
part in making those discoveries and in putting them to use.”  This remains true today.  
It is antithetical to this incentive to restrict eligibility for patenting to what has been done 
in the past, and to foreclose what might be done in the future. 
2007-1130 
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UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FEDERAL CIRCUIT 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
       
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
             
2007-1130 
(Serial No.  08/833,892) 
 
 
 
IN RE BERNARD L. BILSKI 
and RAND A. WARSAW 
 
 
 
Appeal from the United States Patent and Trademark Office, Board of Patent Appeals 
and Interferences. 
 
MAYER, Circuit Judge, dissenting. 
 
The en banc order in this case asked: “Whether it is appropriate to reconsider 
State Street Bank & Trust Co. v. Signature Financial Group, Inc., 149 F.3d 1368 (Fed. 
Cir. 1998), and AT&T Corp. v. Excel Communications, Inc., 172 F.3d 1352 (Fed. Cir. 
1999), in this case and, if so, whether those cases should be overruled in any respect?”  
I would answer that question with an emphatic “yes.”  The patent system is intended to 
protect and promote advances in science and technology, not ideas about how to 
structure commercial transactions.  Claim 1 of the application of Bernard L. Bilski and 
Rand A. Warsaw (“Bilski”) is not eligible for patent protection because it is directed to a 
method of conducting business.  Affording patent protection to business methods lacks 
constitutional and statutory support, serves to hinder rather than promote innovation 
and usurps that which rightfully belongs in the public domain.  State Street and AT&T 
should be overruled. 
 
 

I. 
In discussing the scope of copyright protection, the Supreme Court has noted 
that “‘a page of history is worth a volume of logic.’”  Eldred v. Ashcroft, 537 U.S. 186, 
200 (2003) (quoting New York Trust Co. v. Eisner, 256 U.S. 345, 349 (1921)).  The 
same holds true with respect to patent protection.  From a historical perspective, it is 
highly unlikely that the framers of the Constitution’s intellectual property clause intended 
to grant patent protection to methods of conducting business.  To the contrary, “those 
who formulated the Constitution were familiar with the long struggle over monopolies so 
prominent in English history, where exclusive rights to engage even in ordinary 
business activities were granted so frequently by the Crown for the financial benefits 
accruing to the Crown only.”  In re Yuan, 188 F.2d 377, 380 (CCPA 1951).  The Statute 
of Monopolies,1 enacted in 1624, curtailed the Crown’s ability to grant “monopolies to 
court favorites in goods or businesses which had long before been enjoyed by the 
public.”  Graham v. John Deere Co., 383 U.S. 1, 5 (1966).  When drafting the 
Constitution, the framers were well aware of the abuses that led to the English Statute 
of Monopolies and therefore “consciously acted to bar Congress from granting letters 
patent in particular types of business.”  In re Comiskey, 499 F.3d 1365, 1375 (Fed. Cir. 
2007); see also Malla Pollack, The Multiple Unconstitutionality of Business Method 
Patents: Common Sense, Congressional Consideration, and Constitutional History, 28 
Rutgers Computer & Tech. L.J. 61, 90 (2002) (“[T]he ratifying generation did not agree 
                                            
1    The Statute of Monopolies “grew out of abuses in the grant of exclusive 
franchises in various lines of business such as trading cards, alehouses and various 
staple products.”  Robert P. Merges, As Many as Six Impossible Patents Before 
Breakfast: Property Rights for Business Concepts and Patent System Reform, 14 
Berkeley Tech. L.J. 577, 585 (1999). 
 
2007-1130 
2

to invention patents on advances in trade itself, because trade monopolies were 
odious.”).   
There is nothing in the early patent statutes to indicate that Congress intended 
business methods to constitute patentable subject matter.  See Patent Act of 1790 § 4, 
1 Stat. 109, 111 (1790); Patent Act of 1793 § 1, 1 Stat. 318, 319 (1793); Pollack, supra 
at 106 (“[I]f any nation was ripe for invention patents on business methods, it was the 
newly freed colonies of British North America. . . .  [H]owever, no business method 
patents seem to have been granted.”).  As early as 1869, the Commissioner of Patents 
said that “[i]t is contrary . . . to the spirit of the law, as construed by the office for many 
years, to grant patents for methods of book-keeping,” Ex parte Abraham, 1869 Dec. 
Comm'r Pat. 59, 59 (1869), and by 1893 the courts had concluded that “a method of 
transacting common business . . . does not seem to be patentable as an art,” United 
States Credit Sys. Co. v. Am. Credit Indem. Co., 53 F. 818, 819 (C.C.S.D.N.Y. 1893), 
aff'd on other grounds, 59 F. 139 (2d Cir. 1893).  By 1952, when Congress enacted the 
current Patent Act, it was widely acknowledged that methods of doing business were 
ineligible for patent protection.  See, e.g., Loew’s Drive-In Theatres, Inc. v. Park-In 
Theatres, Inc., 174 F.2d 547, 552 (1st Cir. 1949) (“[A] system for the transaction of 
business . . . however novel, useful, or commercially successful is not patentable apart 
from the means for making the system practically useful, or carrying it out.”); In re 
Patton, 127 F.2d 324 (CCPA 1942) (noting that “a system of transacting business, apart 
from the means for carrying out such system” is not patentable); Hotel Sec. Checking 
Co. v. Lorraine Co., 160 F. 467, 469 (2d Cir. 1908) (“A system of transacting business 
disconnected from the means for carrying out the system is not, within the most liberal 
2007-1130 
3

interpretation of the term, an art.”); In re Moeser, 27 App. D.C. 307, 310 (1906) (holding 
that a system for burial insurance contracts was not patentable because “contracts or 
proposals for contracts, devised or adopted as a method of transacting a particular 
class of . . . business, [are] not patentable as an art”); see also 145 Cong. Rec. H6,947 
(Aug. 3, 1999) (statement of Rep. Manzullo) (“Before the State Street Bank and Trust 
case . . . it was universally thought that methods of doing or conducting business were 
not patentable items.”).  
  In passing the 1952 Act, Congress re-enacted statutory language that had long 
existed,2 thus signaling its intent to carry forward the body of case law that had 
developed under prior versions of the statute.  Because there is nothing in the language 
of the 1952 Act, or its legislative history, to indicate that Congress intended to modify 
the rule against patenting business methods, we must presume that no change in the 
rule was intended.  See, e.g., Astoria Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n v. Solimino, 501 U.S. 104, 
108 (1991)  (“[W]here a common-law principle is well established . . . the courts may 
take it as given that Congress has legislated with an expectation that the principle will 
apply except when a statutory purpose to the contrary is evident.” (citations and internal 
quotation marks omitted));  Isbrandtsen Co. v. Johnson, 343 U.S. 779, 783 (1952) 
(“Statutes which invade the common law . . . are to be read with a presumption favoring 
the retention of long-established and familiar principles, except when a statutory 
purpose to the contrary is evident.”); see also In re Schrader, 22 F.3d 290, 295 (Fed. 
Cir. 1994) (“When Congress approved the addition of the term ‘process’ to the 
                                            
2    Congress did substitute the word “process” for “art” in the 1952 Act, but 
“[a]nalysis of the eligibility of a claim of patent protection for a ‘process’ did not change 
with the addition of that term to § 101.”  Diamond v. Diehr, 450 U.S. 175, 184 (1981).  
 
2007-1130 
4

categories of patentable subject matter in 1952, it incorporated the definition of ‘process’ 
that had evolved in the courts.” (footnote omitted)).  If Congress had wished to change 
the established practice of disallowing patents on business methods, it was quite 
capable of doing so explicitly.  See Parker v. Flook, 437 U.S. 584, 596 (1978) (stressing 
that courts “must proceed cautiously when . . . asked to extend patent rights into areas 
wholly unforeseen by Congress”).     
State Street’s decision to jettison the prohibition against patenting methods of 
doing business contravenes congressional intent.  Because (1) “the framers consciously 
acted to bar Congress from granting letters patent in particular types of business,” 
Comiskey, 499 F.3d at 1375, and (2) Congress evidenced no intent to modify the long-
established rule against business method patents when it enacted the 1952 Patent Act, 
it is hard to fathom how the issuance of patents on business methods can be supported. 
II.   
Business method patents have been justified, in significant measure, by a 
misapprehension of the legislative history of the 1952 Patent Act.  In particular, 
proponents of such patents have asserted that the Act’s legislative history states that 
Congress intended statutory subject matter to “include anything under the sun that is 
made by man.”   AT&T, 172 F.3d at 1355 (Fed. Cir. 1999) (citations and internal 
quotation marks omitted); see also Diamond v. Chakrabarty, 447 U.S. 303, 309 (1980).  
Read in context, however, the legislative history says no such thing.  The full statement 
from the committee report reads:  “A person may have ‘invented’ a machine or a 
manufacture, which may include anything under the sun that is made by man, but it is 
not necessarily patentable under section 101 unless the conditions of the title are 
2007-1130 
5

fulfilled.”  S. Rep. No. 1979, 82d Cong., 2d Sess. 5 (1952) (emphasis added); H.R. Rep. 
No. 1923, 82d Cong., 2d Sess. 6 (1952) (emphasis added).   
This statement does not support the contention that Congress intended “anything 
under the sun” to be patentable.  To the contrary, the language supports the opposite 
view: a person may have “invented” anything under the sun, but it is “not necessarily 
patentable” unless the statutory requirements for patentability have been satisfied.  
Thus, the legislative history oft-cited to support business method patents undercuts, 
rather than supports, the notion that Congress intended to extend the scope of section 
101 to encompass such methods. 
Moreover, the cited legislative history is not discussing process claims at all.  The 
quoted language is discussing “machines” and “manufactures;”  it is therefore surprising 
that it has been thought a fit basis for allowing patents on business processes. 
III.   
 
The Constitution does not grant Congress unfettered authority to issue patents.  
See U.S. Const. art. I, § 8.3  Instead, the patent power is a “qualified authority . . . 
[which] is limited to the promotion of advances in the ‘useful arts.’”  Graham, 383 U.S. at 
5; see also KSR Int’l Co. v. Teleflex Inc., 127 S. Ct. 1727, 1746 (2007) (reaffirming that 
patents are designed to promote “the progress of useful arts”).  What the framers 
described as “useful arts,” we in modern times call “technology.”  Paulik v. Rizkalla, 760 
F.2d 1270, 1276 (Fed. Cir. 1985) (en banc).  Therefore, by mandating that patents 
                                            
3   Article I, § 8 provides that “The Congress shall have Power . . . To promote the 
Progress of Science and useful Arts by securing for limited Times to Authors and 
Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.”  The patent 
power “is the only one of the several powers conferred upon the Congress which is 
accompanied by a specific statement of the reason for it.”  Yaun, 188 F.2d at 380. 
2007-1130 
6

advance the useful arts, “[t]he Constitution explicitly limited patentability to . . . ‘the 
process today called technological innovation.’”  Comiskey, 499 F.3d at 1375 (quoting 
Paulik, 760 F.2d at 1276); see also In re Foster, 438 F.2d 1011 (CCPA 1971) (“All that 
is necessary . . . to make a sequence of operational steps a  statutory ‘process’ within 
35 U.S.C. § 101 is that it be in the technological arts.”); Karl B. Lutz, Patents and 
Science: A Clarification of the Patent Clause of the U.S. Constitution, 18 Geo. Wash. L. 
Rev. 50, 54 (1949) (“The term ‘useful arts’ as used in the Constitution . . . is best 
represented in modern language by the word ‘technology.’”);  James S. Sfekas, 
Controlling Business Method Patents: How the Japanese Standard for Patenting 
Software Could Bring Reasonable Limitations to Business Method Patents in the United 
States, 16 Pac. Rim. L. & Pol’y J. 197, 214 (2007) (At the time the Patent Clause was 
adopted, “the term ‘useful arts’ was commonly used in contrast to the ideas of the 
‘liberal arts’ and the ‘fine arts,’ which were well-known ideas in the eighteenth century.”).   
 
Before State Street led us down the wrong path, this court had rightly concluded 
that patents were designed to protect technological innovations, not ideas about the 
best way to run a business.4  We had thus rejected as unpatentable a method for 
                                            
 
4    “[D]espite the assertions in State Street and Schrader, very few in the patent 
community believe that business methods have always been patentable.  To the 
contrary, the dominant view is that the law has changed, and that the definition of 
patentable subject matter is now wider than it once was.”  R. Carl Moy, Subjecting 
Rembrandt to the Rule of Law: Rule-Based Solutions for Determining the Patentability 
of Business Methods, 28 Wm. Mitchell L. Rev. 1047, 1060 (2002) (footnotes omitted); 
see also Rochelle Cooper Dreyfuss, Are Business Method Patents Bad for Business?, 
16 Santa Clara Computer & High Tech. L.J. 263, 265-66 (2000) (State Street gave 
“judicial recognition to business method patents.”).   Over the course of two centuries, a 
few patents issued on what could arguably be deemed methods of doing business, see, 
e.g., U.S. Patent No. 5,664,115 (“Interactive Computer System to Match Buyers and 
Sellers of Real Estate, Businesses and Other Property Using the Internet”), but these 
patents were aberrations and the general rule, prior to State Street, was that methods of 
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coordinating firefighting efforts, Patton, 127 F.2d at 326-27, a method for deciding how 
salesmen should best handle customers, In re Maucorps, 609 F.2d 481 (CCPA 1979), 
and a computerized method for aiding a neurologist in diagnosing patients, In re Meyer, 
688 F.2d 789 (CCPA 1982).5  We stated that patentable processes must “be in the 
technological arts so as to be in consonance with the Constitutional purpose to promote 
                                                                                                                                             
engaging in business were ineligible for patent protection.  See Comiskey, 499 F.3d at 
1374 (noting that “[a]t one time, ‘[t]hough seemingly within the category of process or 
method, a method of doing business [was] rejected as not being within the statutory 
classes.’” (quoting  State Street, 149 F.3d at 1377)).  One commentator has noted that 
although the United States Patent and Trademark Office (“USPTO”) “in an attempt to 
deflect criticism [has] issued an apologia . . . asserting that business method patents are 
as old as the United States patent system,” this document is fundamentally flawed.  See 
Pollack, supra at 73-75.  She explains:  
 
The USPTO wants us to believe that it found no records of patents whose 
points of invention were business methods, because no one had time to 
invent any new business methods until the human race had run its 
mechanical ingenuity to the peak of computer software; seemingly we 
were all too busy inventing the computer to think about anything else— 
especially new ways of doing business.  I thought that we granted patents 
because, otherwise, people would be too busy making money by running 
businesses to take time out to invent anything except business methods. 
The USPTO [document], furthermore, is eliding the printed matter 
exception to patentable subject matter with the business method 
exception.  
 
Id.  at 75 (footnote omitted). 
 
5      The  claims  in  Patton were explicitly rejected on the basis that they were 
directed to a business method, while the claims in Maucorps and Meyer were rejected 
as attempts to patent mathematical algorithms.  Subsequently, however, this court 
stated that the claimed processes in Maucorps and Meyer were directed toward 
business systems and should therefore not be considered patent eligible.  In re Alappat, 
33 F.3d 1526, 1541 (Fed. Cir. 1994) (en banc).  We noted that “Maucorps dealt with a 
business methodology for deciding how salesmen should best handle respective 
customers and Meyer involved a ‘system’ for aiding a neurologist in diagnosing patients.  
Clearly, neither of the alleged ‘inventions’ in those cases falls within any § 101 
category.”  Id.  
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the progress of ‘useful arts.’”  In re Musgrave, 431 F.2d 882, 893 (CCPA 1970) 
(emphasis added). 
 
Business method patents do not promote the “useful arts” because they are not 
directed to any technological or scientific innovation.  Although business method 
applications may use technology—such as computers—to accomplish desired results, 
the innovative aspect of the claimed method is an entrepreneurial rather than a 
technological one.  Thus, although Bilski’s claimed hedging method could theoretically 
be implemented on a computer, that alone does not render it patentable.  See Diehr, 
450 U.S. at 192 n.14 (Patentability cannot be established by the “token” use of 
technology.); Gottschalk v. Benson, 409 U.S. 63, 64-66 (1972) (finding unpatentable a 
method of programming a general purpose digital computer to convert signals from 
binary-coded decimal to pure binary form).  Where a claimed business method simply 
uses a known machine to do what it was designed to do, such as using a computer to 
gather data or perform calculations, use of that machine will not bring otherwise 
unpatentable subject matter within the ambit of section 101.  See Benson, 409 U.S. at 
67 (finding a process unpatentable where “[t]he mathematical procedures [could] be 
carried out in existing computers long in use, no new machinery being necessary”). 
 
Although the Supreme Court has not directly addressed the patentability of 
business methods, several of its decisions implicitly tether patentability to technological 
innovation.  See Pfaff v. Wells Elecs., Inc., 525 U.S. 55, 63 (1998) (“[T]he patent system 
represents a carefully crafted bargain that encourages both the creation and the public 
disclosure of new and useful advances in technology, in return for an exclusive 
monopoly for a limited period of time.” (emphasis added)); Markman v. Westview 
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Instruments, Inc., 517 U.S. 370, 390 (1996) (“Congress created the Court of Appeals for 
the Federal Circuit as an exclusive appellate court for patent cases . . . observing that 
increased uniformity would strengthen the United States patent system in such a way as 
to foster technological growth and industrial innovation.” (citations and internal quotation 
marks omitted) (emphasis added)); Benson, 409 U.S. at 71 (refusing to “freeze [the 
patentability of] process patents to old technologies, leaving no room for the revelations 
of the new, onrushing technology” (emphases added)).  Indeed, the Supreme Court has 
repeatedly emphasized that what renders subject matter patentable is “the application 
of the law of nature to a new and useful end.”  Funk Bros. Seed Co. v. Kalo Inoculant 
Co., 333 U.S. 127, 130 (1948);  see Diehr, 450 U.S. at 188 n.11; Benson, 409 U.S. at 
67.  6  Applying laws of nature to new and useful ends is nothing other than 
“technology.”7  See, e.g., Microsoft Computer Dictionary 513 (5th ed. 2002) (The 
definition of “technology” is the “application of science and engineering to the 
                                            
6  Laws of nature are those laws pertaining to the “natural sciences,” such as 
biology, chemistry, or physics.  See, e.g., Webster’s New International Dictionary 1507 
(3d ed. 2002) (“Natural sciences” are the “branches of science ([such] as physics, 
chemistry, [or] biology) that deal with matter, energy, and their interrelations and 
transformations or with objectively measured phenomena.”). They must be 
distinguished from other types of law, such as laws of economics or statutory 
enactments.  Laws of nature do not involve “judgments on human conduct, ethics, 
morals, economics, politics, law, aesthetics, etc.”  Musgrave, 431 F.2d at 890; see also 
Joy Y. Xiang, How Wide Should the Gate of “Technology” Be? Patentability of 
Business Methods in China, 11 Pac. Rim L. & Pol’y J. 795, 807 (2002) (noting that 
State Street’s “‘useful, concrete and tangible result’ test is inconsistent with the 
‘application of the law of nature’ patent eligibility scope outlined by the U.S. Supreme 
Court and [the Federal Circuit prior to State Street].”). 
 
7   One commentator notes that both Japan and the Republic of Korea explicitly 
define an “invention” as the application of a law of nature, and argues that the United 
States should follow a similar approach to patentability.  See Andrew A. Schwartz, The 
Patent Office Meets the Poison Pill: Why Legal Methods Cannot be Patented, 20 Harv. 
J. Law & Tech. 333, 357 (2007). 
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development of machines and procedures in order to enhance or improve human 
conditions.’’);  American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 1777 (4th ed. 
2000) (“Technology” is the “application of science, especially to industrial or commercial 
objectives.”); see also Sfekas, supra at 214-15 (“The [Supreme] Court’s holdings in 
Benson and Diehr are really stating a requirement that inventions must be 
technological.”); Schwartz, supra at 357 (The “clear and consistent body of Supreme 
Court case law establishes that the term ‘invention’ encompasses anything made by 
man that utilizes or harnesses one or more ‘laws of nature’ for human benefit.”).  As the 
Supreme Court has made clear, “the act of invention . . . consists neither in finding out 
the laws of nature, nor in fruitful research as to the operation of natural laws, but in 
discovering how those laws may be utilized or applied for some beneficial purpose, by a 
process, a device or a machine.”  United States v. Dubilier Condenser Corp., 289 U.S. 
178, 188 (1933).  
 
Methods of doing business do not apply “the law of nature to a new and useful 
end.”  Because the innovative aspect of such methods is an entrepreneurial rather than 
a technological one, they should be deemed ineligible for patent protection.  See, e.g., 
John R. Thomas, The Patenting of the Liberal Professions, 40 B.C. L. Rev. 1139 (1999) 
(arguing that affording patentability to business methods opens the door to obtaining 
patent protection for all aspects of human thought and behavior, and that patents should 
remain grounded in science and technology) (hereinafter “Thomas (1999)”).    “[T]he 
primary purpose of our patent laws is not the creation of private fortunes for the owners 
of patents but is ‘to promote the progress of science and useful arts.’”  Motion Picture 
Patents Co. v. Universal Film Mfg. Co.,  243 U.S. 502, 511 (1917).  Although business 
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method patents may do much to enrich their owners, they do little to promote scientific 
research and technological innovation.  
IV.   
State Street has launched a legal tsunami, inundating the patent office with 
applications seeking protection for common business practices.8  Applications for Class 
705 (business method) patents increased from fewer than 1,000 applications in 1997 to 
more than 11,000 applications in 2007.  See United States Patent and Trademark 
Office, Class 705 Application Filings and Patents Issued Data, available at 
http://www.uspto.gov/web/menu/pbmethod/applicationfiling.htm (information available 
as of Jan. 2008); see Douglas L. Price, Assessing the Patentability of Financial Services 
and Products, 3 J. High Tech. L. 141, 153 (2004) (“The State Street case has opened 
the floodgates on business method patents.”).  
Patents granted in the wake of State Street have ranged from the somewhat 
ridiculous to the truly absurd.  See, e.g., U.S. Patent No. 5,851,117 (method of training 
janitors to dust and vacuum using video displays); U.S. Patent No. 5,862,223 (method 
for selling expert advice); U.S. Patent No. 6,014,643 (method for trading securities); 
U.S. Patent No. 6,119,099 (method of enticing customers to order additional food at a 
                                            
8    Congress has acted to ameliorate some of the negative effects of granting 
patents on methods of doing business.  It passed the American Inventors Protection Act 
(commonly referred to as the First Inventor Defense Act) which provides an affirmative 
defense against a business method patent infringement action if the defendant “acting 
in good faith, actually reduced the subject matter to practice at least 1 year before the 
effective filing date of such patent, and commercially used the subject matter before the 
effective filing date of such patent.”  See 35 U.S.C. § 273.  Even where a defendant 
may qualify for this defense, however, he “still must engage in expensive litigation 
where [he] bears the burden of affirmatively raising and proving the defense.”  See  
Nicholas A. Smith, Business Method Patents and Their Limits: Justifications, History, 
and the Emergence of A Claim Construction Jurisprudence, 9 Mich. Telecomm. & Tech. 
L. Rev. 171, 199 (2002).    
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fast food restaurant); U.S. Patent No. 6,329,919 (system for toilet reservations); U.S. 
Patent No. 7,255,277 (method of using color-coded bracelets to designate dating status 
in order to limit “the embarrassment of rejection”).  There has even been a patent issued 
on a method for obtaining a patent.  See U.S. Patent No. 6,049,811.  Not surprisingly, 
State Street and its progeny have generated a thundering chorus of criticism.  See  Leo 
J. Raskind, The State Street Bank Decision: The Bad Business of Unlimited Patent 
Protection for Methods of Doing Business, 10 Fordham Intell. Prop. Media & Ent. L.J. 
61, 61 (1999) (“The Federal Circuit’s recent endorsement of patent protection for 
methods of doing business marks so sweeping a departure from precedent as to invite 
a search for its justification.”); Pollack, supra at 119-20 (arguing that State Street was 
based upon a misinterpretation of both the legislative history and the language of 
section 101 and that “business method patents are problematical both socially and 
constitutionally”); Price, supra at 155 (“The fall out from State Street has created a gold-
rush mentality toward patents and litigation in which companies . . . . gobble up patents 
on anything and everything . . . .  It is a mad rush to get as many dumb patents as 
possible.” (citations and internal quotation marks omitted)); Thomas (1999), supra at 
1160 (“After State Street, it is hardly an exaggeration to say that if you can name it, you 
can claim it.”); Sfekas, supra at 226 (“[T]he U.S. courts have set too broad a standard 
for patenting business methods. . . .  These business method patents tend to be of 
lower quality and are unnecessary to achieve the goal of encouraging innovation in 
business.”); William Krause, Sweeping the E-Commerce Patent Minefield: The Need for 
a Workable Business Method Exception, 24 Seattle U. L. Rev. 79, 101 (2000) (State 
Street “opened up a world of unlimited possession to anyone quick enough to take a 
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business method and put it to use via computer software before anyone else.”); Moy, 
supra at 1051 (“To call [the situation following State Street] distressing is an 
understatement.  The consensus . . . appears to be that patents should not be issuing 
for new business methods.”). 
There are a host of difficulties associated with allowing patents to issue on 
methods of conducting business.  Not only do such patents tend to impede rather than 
promote innovation, they are frequently of poor quality.  Most fundamentally, they raise 
significant First Amendment concerns by imposing broad restrictions on speech and the 
free flow of ideas.   
A.   
 
“[T]he underlying policy of the patent system [is] that ‘the things which are worth 
to the public the embarrassment of an exclusive patent,’ . . . must outweigh the 
restrictive effect of the limited patent monopoly.”   Graham,  383 U.S. at 10-11 (quoting 
letter from Thomas Jefferson to Isaac McPherson (Aug. 1813)).  Thus, Congress may 
not expand the scope of “the patent monopoly without regard to the . . .  advancement 
or social benefit gained thereby.”  Id. at 6. 
 
Patents should be granted to those inventions “which would not be disclosed or 
devised but for the inducement of a patent.”  Id. at 11.  Methods of doing business have 
existed since the earliest days of the Patent Act and have flourished even in the 
absence of patent protection.  See Brian P. Biddinger, Limiting the Business Method 
Patent: A Comparison and Proposed Alignment of European, Japanese and United 
States Patent Law, 69 Fordham L. Rev. 2523, 2544-50 (2001).  Commentators have 
argued that “the broad grant of patent protection for methods of doing business is 
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something of a square peg in a sinkhole of uncertain dimensions” since “[n]owhere in 
the substantial literature on innovation is there a statement that the United States 
economy suffers from a lack of innovation in methods of doing business.”  Raskind, 
supra at 92-93.  Instead, “the long history of U.S. business is one of innovation, 
emulation, and innovation again.  It also is a history of remarkable creativity and 
success, all without business method patents until the past few years.”  Smith, supra at 
178; see also Sfekas, supra at 213 (“While innovation in business methods is a good 
thing, it is likely that there would be the same level of innovation even without patents 
on [such methods].”). 
 
Business innovations, by their very nature, provide a competitive advantage and 
thus generate their own incentives.  See Xiang, supra at 813 (“A business entity 
improves the way it does business in order to be more effective and efficient, to stay 
ahead of [the] competition, and to make more profit.”).  The rapid “growth of fast food 
restaurants, self-service gasoline stations, quick oil change facilities . . . automatic teller 
devices . . . and alternatives for long-distance telephone services” casts real doubt 
about the need for the additional incentive of patent protection in the commercial realm.  
Raskind, supra at 93.   
 
Although patents are not a prerequisite to business innovation, they are of 
undeniable importance in promoting technological advances. For example, the 
pharmaceutical industry relies on patent protection in order to recoup the large sums it 
invests to develop life-saving and life-enhancing drugs: 
[T]he "fully loaded" cost of developing a single new pharmaceutical 
molecule, taking it though laboratory and clinical trials, and securing FDA 
approval for its marketing is today about $800 million (including the cost of 
project failures).  Furthermore, fewer than one in five drug candidates that 
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make it out of the laboratory survive this tortuous process and reach the 
marketplace in the form of FDA-approved pharmaceuticals. . . .  Only 
patent protection can make the innovator's substantial investment in 
development and clinical testing economically rational. 
 
Jay Dratler, Jr., Alice in Wonderland Meets the U.S. Patent System, 38 Akron L. Rev. 
299, 313-14 (2005) (footnotes omitted). 
 Business 
method 
patents, unlike those granted for pharmaceuticals and other 
products, offer rewards that are grossly disproportionate to the costs of innovation.  In 
contrast to technological endeavors, business innovations frequently involve little or no 
investment in research and development.  Bilski, for example, likely spent only nominal 
sums to develop his hedging method.  The reward he could reap if his application were 
allowed—exclusive rights over methods of managing risks in a wide array of commodity 
transactions—vastly exceeds any costs he might have incurred in devising his 
“invention.” 
B.   
 
“[S]ometimes too much patent protection can impede rather than ‘promote the 
Progress of Science and useful Arts,’ the constitutional objective of patent and copyright 
protection.”  Lab. Corp. of Am. Holdings v. Metabolite Labs., Inc., 548 U.S. 124, 126 
(2006) (Breyer, J., joined by Stevens and Souter, JJ., dissenting from dismissal of writ 
of certiorari) (emphasis in original).  This is particularly true in the context of patents on 
methods of conducting business.  Instead of providing incentives to competitors to 
develop improved business techniques, business method patents remove building 
blocks of commercial innovation from the public domain.  Dreyfuss, supra at 275-77.  
Because they restrict competitors from using and improving upon patented business 
methods, such patents stifle innovation.  When “we grant rights to exclude 
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unnecessarily, we . . . limit competition with no quid pro quo.  Retarding competition 
retards further development.”  Pollack, supra at 76.  “Think how the airline industry 
might now be structured if the first company to offer frequent flyer miles had enjoyed the 
sole right to award them or how differently mergers and acquisitions would be financed  
. . . if the use of junk bonds had been protected by a patent.”  Dreyfuss, supra at 264.  
By affording patent protection to business practices, “the government distorts the 
operation of the free market system and reduces the gains from the operation of the 
market.”  Sfekas, supra at 214. 
 
It is often consumers who suffer when business methods are patented.  See 
Raskind, supra at 82.  Patented products are more expensive because licensing fees 
are often passed on to consumers.  See Lois Matelan, The Continuing Controversy 
Over Business Method Patents, 18 Fordham Intell. Prop. Med. & Ent. L.J. 189, 201 
(2007).  Further, as a general matter, “quantity and quality [of patented products] are 
less than they would be in a competitive market.”  Dreyfuss, supra at 275. 
 
Patenting business methods makes American companies less competitive in the 
global marketplace.  American companies can now obtain exclusionary rights on 
methods of conducting business, but their counterparts in Europe and Japan generally 
cannot.  See Biddinger, supra at 2546-47.  Producing products in the United States 
becomes more expensive because American companies, unlike their overseas 
counterparts, must incur licensing fees in order to use patented business methods: 
[O]nce a United States patent application for a new method of doing 
business becomes publicly available, companies in Europe and Japan 
may begin using the method outside the United States, while American 
companies in competition with the patentee would be unable to use the 
method in the United States without incurring licensing fees.  The result is 
that companies outside of the United States receive the benefit of the 
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novel method without incurring either the research and development costs 
of the inventor, or the licensing fees of the patentee’s American 
competitors. 
 
Id. at 2545-46. 
 
C.   
Another significant problem that plagues business method patents is that they 
tend to be of poor overall quality.  See eBay Inc. v. MercExchange, L.L.C., 547 U.S. 
388, 397 (2006) (Kennedy, J., joined by Stevens, Souter, and Breyer, JJ., concurring) 
(noting the “potential vagueness and  suspect validity” of some of “the burgeoning 
number of patents over business methods”).  Commentators have lamented “the 
frequency with which the Patent Office issues patents on shockingly mundane business 
inventions.”  Dreyfuss, supra at 268; see also Pollack, supra at 106 (“[M]any of the 
recently-issued business method patents are facially (even farcically) obvious to 
persons outside the USPTO.”).  One reason for the poor quality of business method 
patents is the lack of readily accessible prior art references.  Because business 
methods were not patentable prior to State Street, “there is very little patent-related prior 
art readily at hand to the examiner corps.”  Dreyfuss, supra at 269. 
 
Furthermore, information about methods of conducting business, unlike 
information about technological endeavors, is often not documented or published in 
scholarly journals.  See Russell A. Korn, Is Legislation the Answer? An Analysis of the 
Proposed Legislation for Business Method Patents, 29 Fla. St. U.L. Rev. 1367, 1372-73 
(2002).  The fact that examiners lack the resources to weed out undeserving 
applications “has led to the improper approval of a large number of patents, leaving 
private parties to clean up the mess through litigation.”  Krause, supra at 97. 
2007-1130 
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Allowing patents to issue on business methods shifts critical resources away 
from promoting and protecting truly useful technological advances.  As discussed 
previously, the patent office has been deluged with business method applications in 
recent years.   Time spent on such applications is time not spent on applications which 
claim true innovations.  When already overburdened examiners are forced to devote 
significant time to reviewing large numbers of business method applications, the public’s 
access to new and beneficial technologies is unjustifiably delayed.   
D.   
 
Patenting business methods allows private parties to claim exclusive ownership 
of ideas and practices which rightfully belong in the public domain.  “It is a matter of 
public interest that [economic] decisions, in the aggregate, be intelligent and well 
informed.  To this end, the free flow of commercial information is indispensable.”  Virginia 
State Bd. of Pharmacy v. Virginia Citizens Consumer Council, Inc., 425 U.S. 748, 765 
(1976).  Thus, “the stringent requirements for patent protection seek to assure that ideas 
in the public domain remain there for the free use of the public.”  Aronson v. Quick Point 
Pencil Co., 440 U.S. 257, 262 (1979).   
 
Bilski’s claimed method consists essentially of two conversations.  The first 
conversation is between a commodity provider and a commodity consumer, while the 
second conversation is between the provider and “market participants” who have “a 
counter-risk position to . . . consumers.”  His claims provide almost no details as to the 
contents of these conversations.  
 
Like many business method applications, Bilksi’s application is very broadly 
drafted.  It covers a wide range of means for “hedging” in commodity transactions.  If his 
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application were allowed, anyone who discussed ways to balance market risks in any 
sort of commodity could face potential infringement liability.  By adopting overly 
expansive standards for patentability, the government enables private parties to impose 
broad and unwarranted burdens on speech and the free flow of ideas.  See Thomas F. 
Cotter, A Burkean Perspective on Patent Eligibility, 22 Berkeley Tech. L.J. 855, 880-82 
(2007) (arguing that overly expansive patent eligibility standards can result in the 
granting of patents that threaten free speech, privacy and other constitutionally-
protected rights); John R. Thomas, The Future of Patent Law: Liberty and Property in 
the Patent Law, 39 Hous. L. Rev. 569, 589 (2002) (arguing that “the patent law allows 
private actors to impose more significant restraints on speech than has ever been 
possible through copyright”); see also Cent. Hudson Gas & Elec. Corp. v. Pub. Serv. 
Comm’n of New York, 447 U.S. 557, 569-70 (1980) (The First Amendment mandates 
that restrictions on free speech in commercial transactions be “no more extensive than 
necessary.”).   
 
To the extent that business methods are deemed patentable, individuals can face 
unexpected potential infringement liability for everyday conversations and commercial 
interactions.  “[I]mplicit in the Patent Clause itself [is the understanding] that free 
exploitation of ideas will be the rule, to which the protection of a federal patent is the 
exception.”  Bonito Boats, Inc. v. Thunder Craft Boats, Inc., 489 U.S. 141, 151 (1989).  
In the wake of State Street, too many patent holders have been allowed to claim 
exclusive ownership of subject matter that rightfully belongs in the public domain.   
 
 
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V.   
The majority’s proposed “machine-or-transformation test” for patentability will do 
little to stem the growth of patents on non-technological methods and ideas.  Quite 
simply, in the context of business method patent applications, the majority’s proposed 
standard can be too easily circumvented.  See Cotter, supra at 875 (noting that the 
physical transformation test for patentability can be problematic because “[i]n a material 
universe, every process will cause some sort of physical transformation, if only at the 
microscopic level or within the human body, including the brain”). Through clever 
draftsmanship, nearly every process claim can be rewritten to include a physical 
transformation.  Bilski, for example, could simply add a requirement that a commodity 
consumer install a meter to record commodity consumption.  He could then argue that 
installation of this meter was a “physical transformation,” sufficient to satisfy the majority’s 
proposed patentability test.  
Even as written, Bilski’s claim arguably involves a physical transformation.  Prior 
to utilizing Bilski’s method, commodity providers and commodity consumers are not 
involved in transactions to buy and sell a commodity at a fixed rate.  By using Bilski’s 
claimed method, however, providers and consumers enter into a series of transactions 
allowing them to buy and sell a particular commodity at a particular price.  Entering into a 
transaction is a physical process: telephone calls are made, meetings are held, and 
market participants must physically execute contracts.  Market participants go from a 
state of not being in a commodity transaction to a state of being in such a transaction.  
The majority, however, fails to explain how this sort of physical transformation is 
insufficient to satisfy its proposed patent eligibility standard.   
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The majority suggests that a technological arts test is nothing more that a “short-
cut” for its machine-or-transformation test.  Ante at 29.  To the contrary, however, the two 
tests are fundamentally different.  Consider U.S. Patent No. 7,261,652, which is directed 
to a method of putting a golf ball, U.S. Patent No. 6,368,227, which is directed to a 
method of swinging on a swing suspended on a tree branch, and U.S. Patent No. 
5,443,036, which is directed to a method of “inducing cats to exercise.”    Each of these 
“inventions” involves a physical transformation that is central to the claimed method: the 
golfer’s stroke is changed, a person on a swing starts swinging, and the sedentary cat 
becomes a fit feline.  Thus, under the majority’s approach, each of these inventions is 
patent eligible.  Under a technological arts test, however, none of these inventions is 
eligible for patent protection because none involves any advance in science or 
technology.9   
Regardless of whether a claimed process involves a “physical transformation,” it 
should not be patent eligible unless it is directed to an advance in science or 
technology.  See Benson, 409 U.S. at 64-71 (finding a process unpatentable even 
though it “transformed” binary-coded decimals into pure binary numbers using a general 
purpose computer).  Although the Supreme Court has stated that a patentable process 
will usually involve a transformation of physical matter, see id. at 70, it has never found 
a process patent eligible which did not involve a scientific or technological innovation.  
See Diehr, 450 U.S. at 192-93 (finding a process patentable where it involved new 
technology for curing rubber).    
                                            
9 The majority’s approach will encourage rent-seeking on a broad range of 
human thought and behavior.  For example, because organizing a country into a 
democratic or socialist regime clearly involves a physical transformation, what is to 
prevent patents from issuing on forms of government?  
 
2007-1130 
22

 
The majority refuses to inject a technology requirement into the section 101 
analysis because it believes that the terms “technological arts” and “technology” are 
“ambiguous.”  See ante at 21.  To the contrary, however, the meaning of these terms is 
not particularly difficult to grasp.  “The need to apply some sort of ‘technological arts’ 
criterion has hardly led other countries’ and regions’ patent systems to grind to a halt; it 
is hard to see why it should be an insurmountable obstacle for ours.”  Cotter, supra at  
885.  As discussed more fully in section III, a claimed process is technological to the 
extent it applies laws of nature to new ends.  See Benson, 409 U.S. at 67 (“‘If there is to 
be invention from . . . a discovery, it must come from the application of the law of nature 
to a new and useful end.’” (quoting Funk Bros., 333 U.S. at 130)).  By contrast, a 
process is non-technological where its inventive concept is the application of principles 
drawn not from the natural sciences but from disciplines such as business, law, 
sociology, or psychology.  See Thomas (1999), supra at 1168 (“[F]ew of us would 
suppose that inventions within the domain of business, law or fine arts constitute 
technology, much less patentable technology.”).  The inventive aspect of Bilski’s 
claimed process is the application of business principles, not laws of nature; it is 
therefore non-technological and ineligible for patent protection. 
 
Unlike a technological standard for patentability, the majority’s proposed test will 
be exceedingly difficult to apply.  The standard that the majority proposes for inclusion 
in the patentability lexicon—“transformation of any physical object or substance, or an 
electronic signal representative of any physical object or substance," ante at 28—is 
unnecessarily complex and will only lead to further uncertainty regarding the scope of 
patentable subject matter.  As noted in In re Nuijten, 500 F.3d 1346, 1353 (Fed. Cir. 
2007-1130 
23

2007), defining the term “physical” can be an “esoteric and metaphysical”  inquiry.  
Indeed, although this court has struggled for years to set out what constitutes sufficient 
physical transformation to render a process patentable, we have yet to provide a 
consistent or satisfactory resolution of this issue. 
 
We took this case en banc in a long-overdue effort to resolve primal questions on 
the metes and bounds of statutory subject matter.  The patent system has run amok, and 
the USPTO, as well as the larger patent community, has actively sought guidance from 
this court in making sense of our section 101 jurisprudence.  See Supplemental Br. of 
Appellee at 3 (“[The Federal Circuit] should clarify the meaning of State Street and AT&T, 
as they have been too often misunderstood.”); Br. of  Fin. Serv. Indus. at 1 (“The rise of 
[business method patents] in recent years has . . . led to uncertainty over the scope of the 
patents granted and, more fundamentally, the definition of patentable subject matter 
itself.  [We] seek a workable standard defining the scope of patentable subject matter, 
one that . . . provides clear guidance to the Patent and Trademark Office . . . and the 
public.”); Br. of Samuelson Law, Tech. and Public Policy Clinic at 1 (“Ever since State 
Street, the [USPTO] has been flooded with applications for a wide variety of non-
technological ‘inventions’ such as arbitration methods, dating methods, tax-planning 
methods, legal methods, and novel-writing methods.  These applications have eroded 
public confidence in the patent system and driven up the cost and decreased the return 
for applicants seeking legitimate technological patents.” (footnote omitted)); Br. of Assoc. 
of Am. Medical Colleges at 29 (arguing that “broad swaths of the public and certain 
industry sectors” have lost respect for the patent system and that “[the Federal Circuit] 
should act, even if its actions mean unsettling the settled expectations of some”).  The 
2007-1130 
24

majority, however, fails to enlighten three of the thorniest issues in the patentability 
thicket: (1) the continued viability of business method patents, (2) what constitutes 
sufficient physical transformation or machine-implementation to render a process 
patentable, and (3) the extent to which computer software and computer-implemented 
processes constitute statutory subject matter.  The majority’s “measured approach” to the 
section 101 analysis, see ante at 25, will do little to restore public confidence in the patent 
system or stem the growth of patents on business methods and other non-technological 
ideas.      
VI. 
 
Where the advance over the prior art on which the applicant relies to make his 
invention patentable is an advance in a field of endeavor such as law (like the arbitration 
method in Comiskey), business (like the method claimed by Bilski) or other liberal—as 
opposed to technological—arts, the application falls outside the ambit of patentable 
subject matter.  The time is ripe to repudiate State Street and to recalibrate the 
standards for patent eligibility, thereby ensuring that the patent system can fulfill its 
constitutional mandate to protect and promote truly useful innovations in science and 
technology.   I dissent from the majority’s failure to do so. 
 
2007-1130 
25

United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit 
 
2007-1130 
(Serial No. 08/883,892) 
 
 
IN RE BERNARD L. BILSKI  
and RAND A. WARSAW 
 
 
 
Appeal from the United States Patent and Trademark Office, Board of Patent Appeals 
and Interferences. 
 
 
RADER, Circuit Judge dissenting. 
 
This court labors for page after page, paragraph after paragraph, explanation 
after explanation to say what could have been said in a single sentence:  “Because 
Bilski claims merely an abstract idea, this court affirms the Board’s rejection.”  If the only 
problem of this vast judicial tome were its circuitous path, I would not dissent, but this 
venture also disrupts settled and wise principles of law. 
Much of the court’s difficulty lies in its reliance on dicta taken out of context from 
numerous Supreme Court opinions dealing with the technology of the past.  In other 
words, as innovators seek the path to the next techno-revolution, this court ties our 
patent system to dicta from an industrial age decades removed from the bleeding edge.  
A direct reading of the Supreme Court’s principles and cases on patent eligibility would 
yield the one-sentence resolution suggested above.  Because this court, however, links 
patent eligibility to the age of iron and steel at a time of subatomic particles and 
terabytes, I must respectfully dissent. 
 
 


The Patent Law of the United States has always embodied the philosophy that 
“ingenuity should receive a liberal encouragement.”  Writings of Thomas Jefferson 75-
76 (Washington ed. 1871); see also Diamond v. Chakrabarty, 447 U.S. 303, 308-09 
(1980).  True to this principle, the original Act made “any new and useful art, machine, 
manufacture or composition of matter” patent eligible.  Act of Feb. 21, 1793, ch. 11, § 1, 
1 Stat. 318 (emphasis supplied).  Even as the laws have evolved, that bedrock principle 
remains at their foundation.  Thus, the Patent Act from its inception focused patentability 
on the specific characteristics of the claimed invention—its novelty and utility—not on its 
particular subject matter category. 
The modern incarnation of section 101 holds fast to that principle, setting forth 
the broad categories of patent eligible subject matter, and conditioning patentability on 
the characteristics, not the category, of the claimed invention: 
Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, 
manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful 
improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the 
conditions and requirements of this title. 
 
35 U.S.C. § 101 (2006) (emphases supplied).  As I have suggested, the Supreme Court 
requires this court to rely on the “ordinary, contemporary, common meaning” of these 
words.  Diamond v. Diehr, 450 U.S. 175, 182 (1981).  If this court would follow that 
Supreme Court rule, it would afford broad patent protection to new and useful inventions 
that fall within the enumerated categories and satisfy the other conditions of 
patentability.  That is, after all, precisely what the statute says.   
In Diehr, the Supreme Court adopted a very useful algorithm for determining 
patentable subject matter, namely, follow the Patent Act itself.  After setting forth the 
2007-1130 2 

procedural history of that case, the Supreme Court stated:  “In cases of statutory 
construction, we begin with the language of the statute.”  Diehr, 450 U.S. at 182.  With 
an eye to the Benson language (so central to this court’s reasoning) that 
“[t]ransformation and reduction of an article ‘to a different state or thing’ is the clue to 
the patentability of a process claim that does not include particular machines,” 
Gottschalk v. Benson, 409 U.S. 63, 72 (1972), the Court then noted: 
[I]n dealing with the patent laws, we have more than once cautioned that 
“courts ‘should not read into the patent laws limitations and conditions 
which the legislature has not expressed.’” 
 
Diehr, 450 U.S. at 182 (citations omitted).  Indeed section 101’s term “process” contains 
no hint of an exclusion for certain types of methods.  This court today nonetheless holds 
that a process is eligible only if it falls within certain subsets of “process.”  Ironically the 
Patent Act itself specifically defines “process” without any of these judicial innovations.  
35 U.S.C. § 100(b).   Therefore, as Diehr commands, this court should refrain from 
creating new circuitous judge-made tests. 
Read in context, section 101 gives further reasons for interpretation without 
innovation.  Specifically, section 101 itself distinguishes patent eligibility from the 
conditions of patentability—providing generously for patent eligibility, but noting that 
patentability requires substantially more.  The language sweeps in “any new and useful 
process . . .  [and] any improvement.”  35 U.S.C. § 101 (emphasis supplied).  As an 
expansive modifier, “any” embraces the broad and ordinary meanings of the term 
“process,” for instance.  The language of section 101 conveys no implication that the 
Act extends patent protection to some subcategories of processes but not others.  It 
does not mean “some” or even “most,” but all.  
2007-1130 3 

Unlike the laws of other nations that include broad exclusions to eligible subject 
matter, such as European restrictions on software and other method patents, see 
European Patent Convention of 1973, Art. 52(2)(c) and (3), and prohibitions against 
patents deemed contrary to the public morality, see id. at Art. 53(a), U.S. law and policy 
have embraced advances without regard to their subject matter.  That promise of 
protection, in turn, fuels the research that, at least for now, makes this nation the world’s 
innovation leader. 
II 
With all of its legal sophistry, the court’s new test for eligibility today does not 
answer the most fundamental question of all:  why would the expansive language of 
section 101 preclude protection of innovation simply because it is not transformational 
or properly linked to a machine (whatever that means)?  Stated even more simply, why 
should some categories of invention deserve no protection? 
This court, which reads the fine print of Supreme Court decisions from the 
Industrial Age with admirable precision, misses the real import of those decisions.  The 
Supreme Court has answered the fundamental question above many times.  The 
Supreme Court has counseled that the only limits on eligibility are inventions that 
embrace natural laws, natural phenomena, and abstract ideas.  See, e.g., Diehr, 450 
U.S. at 185 (“This Court has undoubtedly recognized limits to § 101 and every discovery 
is not embraced within the statutory terms.  Excluded from such patent protection are 
laws of nature, natural phenomena, and abstract ideas.”).  In Diehr, the Supreme 
Court’s last pronouncement on eligibility for “processes,” the Court said directly that its 
only exclusions from the statutory language are these three common law exclusions:  
2007-1130 4 

“Our recent holdings . . . stand for no more than these long-established principles.”  Id. 
at 185.   
This point deserves repetition.  The Supreme Court stated that all of the 
transformation and machine linkage explanations simply restated the abstractness rule.  
In reading Diehr to suggest a non-statutory transformation or preemption test, this court 
ignores the Court’s admonition that all of its recent holdings do no more than restate the 
natural laws and abstractness exclusions.  Id.; see also Chakrabarty, 447 U.S. at 310 
(“Here, by contrast, the patentee has produced a new bacterium with markedly different 
characteristics from any found in nature and one having the potential for significant 
utility.  His discovery is not nature’s handiwork, but his own; accordingly it is patentable 
subject matter under § 101.”); Parker v. Flook, 437 U.S. 584, 591-594 (1978) (“Even 
though a phenomenon of nature or mathematical formula may be well known, an 
inventive application of the principle may be patented.  Conversely, the discovery of 
such a phenomenon cannot support a patent unless there is some other inventive 
concept in its application.”); In re Taner, 681 F.2d 787, 791 (C.C.P.A 1982) (“In Diehr, 
the Supreme Court made clear that Benson stands for no more than the long-
established principle that laws of nature, natural phenomena, and abstract ideas are 
excluded from patent protection.”). 
The abstractness and natural law preclusions not only make sense, they explain 
the purpose of the expansive language of section 101.  Natural laws and phenomena 
can never qualify for patent protection because they cannot be invented at all.  After all, 
God or Allah or Jahveh or Vishnu or the Great Spirit provided these laws and 
phenomena as humanity’s common heritage.  Furthermore, abstract ideas can never 
2007-1130 5 

qualify for patent protection because the Act intends, as section 101 explains, to provide 
“useful” technology.  An abstract idea must be applied to (transformed into) a practical 
use before it qualifies for protection.  The fine print of Supreme Court opinions conveys 
nothing more than these basic principles.  Yet this court expands (transforms?) some 
Supreme Court language into rules that defy the Supreme Court’s own rule. 
When considering the eligibility of “processes,” this court should focus on the 
potential for an abstract claim.  Such an abstract claim would appear in a form that is 
not even susceptible to examination against prior art under the traditional tests for 
patentability.  Thus this court would wish to ensure that the claim supplied some 
concrete, tangible technology for examination.  Indeed the hedging claim at stake in this 
appeal is a classic example of abstractness.  Bilski’s method for hedging risk in 
commodities trading is either a vague economic concept or obvious on its face.  
Hedging is a fundamental economic practice long prevalent in our system of commerce 
and taught in any introductory finance class.  In any event, this facially abstract claim 
does not warrant the creation of new eligibility exclusions. 
III 
This court’s willingness to venture away from the statute follows on the heels of 
an oft-discussed dissent from the Supreme Court’s dismissal of its grant of certiorari in 
Lab. Corp. of Am. Holdings v. Metabolite Labs., Inc., 548 U.S. 124 (2006).  That dissent 
is premised on a fundamental misapprehension of the distinction between a natural 
phenomenon and a patentable process. 
The distinction between “phenomena of nature,” “mental processes,” and 
“abstract intellectual concepts” is not difficult to draw.  The fundamental error in that Lab 
2007-1130 6 

Corp. dissent is its failure to recognize the difference between a patent ineligible 
relationship—i.e., that between high homocysteine levels and folate and cobalamin 
deficiencies—and a patent eligible process for applying that relationship to achieve a 
useful, tangible, and concrete result—i.e., diagnosis of potentially fatal conditions in 
patients.  Nothing abstract here.  Moreover, testing blood for a dangerous condition is 
not a natural phenomenon, but a human invention. 
The distinction is simple but critical:  A patient may suffer from the unpatentable 
phenomenon of nature, namely high homocysteine levels and low folate.  But the 
invention does not attempt to claim that natural phenomenon.  Instead the patent claims 
a process for assaying a patient’s blood and then analyzing the results with a new 
process that detects the life-threatening condition.  Moreover, the sick patient does not 
practice the patented invention.  Instead the patent covers a process for testing blood 
that produces a useful, concrete, and tangible result:  incontrovertible diagnostic 
evidence to save lives.  The patent does not claim the patent ineligible relationship 
between folate and homocysteine, nor does it foreclose future inventors from using that 
relationship to devise better or different processes.  Contrary to the language of the 
dissent, it is the sick patient who “embod[ies] only the correlation between 
homocysteine and vitamin deficiency,” Lab. Corp., 548 U.S. at 137, not the claimed 
process. 
From the standpoint of policy, the Lab Corp. dissent avoids the same 
fundamental question that the Federal Circuit does not ask or answer today:  Is this 
entire field of subject matter undeserving of incentives for invention?  If so, why?  In the 
context of Lab. Corp. that question is very telling:  the natural condition diagnosed by 
2007-1130 7 

the invention is debilitating and even deadly.  See U.S. Patent No. 4,940,658, col. 1, ll. 
32-40 (“Accurate and early diagnosis  of  cobalamin  and  folate  deficiencies . . .   is 
important because these deficiencies can lead to life-threatening hematologic 
abnormalities . . . .  Accurate  and  early  diagnosis of cobalamin deficiency is especially 
important because it can also lead to incapacitating and life-threatening 
neuropsychiatric abnormalities.”).  Before the invention featured in Lab Corp., medical 
science lacked an affordable, reliable, and fast means to detect this debilitating 
condition.  Denial of patent protection for this innovation—precisely because of its 
elegance and simplicity (the chief aims of all good science)—would undermine and 
discourage future research for diagnostic tools.  Put another way, does not Patent Law 
wish to encourage researchers to find simple blood tests or urine tests that predict and 
diagnose breast cancers or immunodeficiency diseases?  In that context, this court 
might profitably ask whether its decisions incentivize research for cures and other 
important technical advances.  Without such attention, this court inadvertently advises 
investors that they should divert their unprotectable investments away from discovery of 
“scientific relationships” within the body that diagnose breast cancer or Lou Gehrig’s 
disease or Parkinson’s or whatever.  
IV 
In sum, this court today invents several circuitous and unnecessary tests.  It 
should have merely noted that Bilski attempts to patent an abstract idea.  Nothing more 
was needed.  Instead this opinion propagates unanswerable questions:  What form or 
amount of “transformation” suffices?  When is a “representative” of a physical object 
sufficiently linked to that object to satisfy the transformation test?  (e.g., Does only vital 
2007-1130 8 

sign data taken directly from a patient qualify, or can population data derived in part 
from statistics and extrapolation be used?)  What link to a machine is sufficient to invoke 
the “or machine” prong?  Are the “specific” machines of Benson required, or can a 
general purpose computer qualify?  What constitutes “extra-solution activity?”  If a 
process may meet eligibility muster as a “machine,” why does the Act “require” a 
machine link for a “process” to show eligibility?  Does the rule against redundancy itself 
suggest an inadequacy in this complex spider web of tests supposedly “required” by the 
language of section 101? 
One final point, reading section 101 as it is written will not permit a flurry of 
frivolous and useless inventions.  Even beyond the exclusion for abstractness, the final 
clause of section 101—“subject to the conditions and requirements of this title”—
ensures that a claimed invention must still satisfy the “conditions and requirements” set 
forth in the remainder title 35.  Id.  These statutory conditions and requirements better 
serve the function of screening out unpatentable inventions than some vague 
“transformation” or “proper machine link” test. 
In simple terms, the statute does not mention “transformations” or any of the 
other Industrial Age descriptions of subject matter categories that this court endows with 
inordinate importance today.  The Act has not empowered the courts to impose 
limitations on patent eligible subject matter beyond the broad and ordinary meaning of 
the terms process, machine, manufacture, and composition of matter.  It has instead 
preserved the promise of patent protection for still unknown fields of invention.   
Innovation has moved beyond the brick and mortar world.  Even this court’s test, 
with its caveats and winding explanations seems to recognize this.  Today’s software 
2007-1130 9 

transforms our lives without physical anchors.  This court’s test not only risks hobbling 
these advances, but precluding patent protection for tomorrow’s technologies.  “We still 
do not know one thousandth of one percent of what nature has revealed to us.”  
Attributed to Albert Einstein.  If this court has its way, the Patent Act may not incentivize, 
but complicate, our search for the vast secrets of nature.  When all else fails, consult the 
statute. 
2007-1130 10