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http://sbseminar.wordpress.com/2010/02/09/grothendiecks-letter/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grothendieck#Retirement_into_reclusion
It's an interesting question -- to what extent a person owns his/her writings (not by law, but morally), especially if those writings have already become an integral and important part of the overall culture?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grothendieck#Retirement_into_reclusion
It's an interesting question -- to what extent a person owns his/her writings (not by law, but morally), especially if those writings have already become an integral and important part of the overall culture?
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Date: 2010-02-10 04:24 am (UTC)Of course, one can withhold one's work for many various reasons (although we might regret this choice, and it might be a moral problem for the author in some cases), and one should ask for permission.
But here we have a situation where publication was going for a long time, and it is obvious that the author knew this and did not mind (or, at least, did not mind enough to voice an objection). Meanwhile, the work acquired its own life, and its own relationship with the community, and became a part of our world.
What I am really asking is it moral for us, at this stage, to ignore the belated objections of the author, and to continue to use and disseminate this work? It is, in some sense, a pragmatic question.
One can also ask whether it is moral for Grothendieck to do something like this now, but I don't think there is any need for us to judge him, so this is not the question I am asking.