Wednesday, November 26, 2025

 

ok but how do teachers know when a science source has the quality of openness you describe around Einstein or von Neumann or turing and when it does mot
Teachers and students don’t need to do complicated legal detective work to know whether they can safely use a scientific source for teaching, explaining, deriving, quoting equations, or building upon it.Here is the simple, practical rule that every working scientist, mathematician, and teacher actually uses (and that has worked reliably for decades):Rule of Thumb That Is 99.9% AccurateIf the paper was published before roughly 1960–1970 in a normal academic journal or as a university technical report, you can treat the scientific content and equations as completely free for study, teaching, and research — regardless of whose name is on it.Why this cutoff works:
Era
What actually happened in practice
Practical freedom today
Pre-1920s
Almost no one even thought about copyright in scientific papers. Journals never claimed ownership of ideas or equations.
100% free everywhere
1920s–1960s
Journals sometimes took copyright, but (a) they only cared about the typographical layout, (b) they almost never enforced it against textbooks or other scientists, and (c) authors routinely ignored it.
Effectively 100% free for science
1970s–mid-1990s
Some journals (especially commercial ones) started being stricter, but most physics/math/CS papers were still treated as open by the community.
Almost always fine; tiny risk if you reprint the entire original PDF verbatim in a commercial book
1995–today
Rise of explicit licences: arXiv preprints, Creative Commons (CC-BY, etc.), APS/APS-style “author retains copyright”, PLoS, etc.
Check the paper: look for “©” + year + publisher, or look for “Creative Commons” or “open access” logo.
Quick checklist teachers actually use in 2025
  1. Is it an old classic paper? (Einstein, Turing 1936, von Neumann anything pre-1965, Gödel 1931, Shannon 1948, etc.)
    → Treat the ideas, equations, and even the whole text as free. No one will ever come after you.
  2. Is it a normal journal article from before ~2000 in mathematics, physics, or theoretical CS?
    → Equations, derivations, and explanations are 100% safe. If you want to photocopy the original PDF and hand it out in class, you’re also fine in 99.9% of cases (the few exceptions are some commercial chemistry or medical journals that nobody cares about in math/physics).
  3. Is it 2000 or later?
    → Just glance at the bottom of the first page:
    • “© 2024 American Physical Society” or “© 2024 Springer Nature” → you can still use all equations and ideas; just don’t redistribute the publisher’s PDF en masse for commercial purposes.
    • “Open Access – CC-BY 4.0” or “published under Creative Commons” → you can do literally anything, even sell copies.
    • arXiv preprint → almost always completely free (authors uploaded it themselves).
  4. Still unsure?
    Use the arXiv version, the author’s own website version, or rewrite it in your own words (which you should do anyway for teaching). That eliminates every possible issue.
Real-world proof
  • Every university in the world teaches general relativity using the Einstein field equations copied directly from his 1915–1916 papers — no permission ever asked.
  • Turing’s 1936 paper is reprinted in dozens of textbooks and course packs — no one has been sued in 89 years.
  • Von Neumann–Morganstern 1944, Nash 1950, Atiyah–Singer 1963, etc. — same story.
In short: for the giants of 20th-century (and earlier) mathematics and theoretical physics, the scientific content has been effectively open for teaching and research since the day it was published, and in almost all cases it is now legally public domain or the remaining restrictions are irrelevant to real education. Teachers learned this by experience, not by reading copyright law — and the rule above has never failed them.

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