What is the
meaning of one? It’s a question that has occupied the minds of the greatest
thinkers such as Philo of Alexandria, who believed that the numeral one was
God’s number and so the basis of all other numbers.
Two
millennia later, in the august surroundings of the Royal Courts of Justice in
London, three judges in the Court of Appeal last week also deliberated on the
meaning of one. They came to the conclusion that one does not necessarily mean
one at all – because it can actually include anything greater than or equal to
a half and less than one-and-a-half.
In a patent
dispute between two pharmaceutical giants arguing over who owns the royalty
rights to a lucrative wound-dressing solution, their lordships sat in judgment
over an issue that would have tested the mettle of the finest mathematical
logicians; and in the process coined a new legal definition of “one”.
It may seem
odd that their lordships dare question the meaning of one – it is after all the
oldest number we have. Some 20,000 years ago, someone scratched a series of
notches along the fibula bone of a baboon with a piece of quartz and in the
process left the earliest known record of the number one.
But that was
long before the legal argy-bargy between ConvaTec, a global medical products
company, and Smith & Nephew, a specialist in “advance wound management”
which questioned a patent owned by ConvaTec on a wound dressing involving
silver and a salt solution.
The ConvaTec
patent covered any salt solution “between 1 per cent and 25 per cent of the
total volume of treatment”. However, Smith and Nephew devised a competing
product that used 0.77 per cent concentration, bypassing, or so it believed,
the ConvaTec patent.
A previous
judgment in 2013 ruled in Smith & Nephew’s favour because of a
mathematical quirk known among chemists as the “significant figures rule”,
which is a way of taking into account errors of measurement.
This
judgment ruled that the patent covered any solution greater than or equal to
0.95 per cent and less than 25.5 per cent, which meant Smith & Nephew was
free to flog its multi-million pound products without paying anything to
ConvaTec.
So in this
earlier judgment “one” meant anything greater than or equal to 0.95 and less
than 1.5, which produced an uncomfortable asymmetry that did not go unnoticed
in last week’s judgment. How could “one” include something that is 0.05 less
but also include something that is nearly ten times this figure more – for
instance 0.49 more than 1?
To correct
this, the three Court of Appeal judges used a mathematical approach, known as
rounding. It exploits that convention of rounding up or rounding down to the
nearest whole number if there are decimal places.
Their
lordships concluded that “one” includes anything greater or equal to 0.5 and
less than 1.5 – much to the chagrin of Smith &Nephew, whose 0.77 now
fell within the realm of ConvaTec’s patent.
One of the
judges, Lord Justice Christopher Clarke, admitted that it may seem daft to
suggest that 0.5 now falls between 1 and 25. “To jump to that conclusion would,
however, ignore the fact that figures, no less than words, may take their
meaning from the context in which they are used,” he wrote in the final
judgment.
“A linguist
may regard the word ‘one’ as meaning ‘one – no more and no less’. To those skilled
in the art it may, however, in context, imply a range of values extending
beyond the integer,” he explained.
No comments:
Post a Comment