Patent practitioners, early on, introduced some very basic concepts from logic and set theory into claim interpretation. Most claims, in particular in the non-chemical arts, use "comprising" in the preamble, which means that the elements recited in the claim are a minimally necessary and sufficient condition for infringement. In the chemical arts, one will often see a more restrictive preamble, variants off of "consisting", which imply that the elements represent a complete set. Add more, and there is no infringement (well, depending on how significant the thing you added). What is interesting is a typical chemical patent claim can afford the patentee what is effectively exclusive use of their invention, in a way that no typical software or hardware patent claim can. And issues of claim ambiguity are exacerbated in the non-chemical arts where the definition of claim elements is not tied to well-accepted scientific categorizations. One must wonder whether these differences underlie the perceived split between the industries on issues of patent reform.