Cute ass fucking
Inq C-Decoy Carnal Knowledge
Source: www.philly.com
Flam, Faye
Source: www.philly.com
Carnal A dragon joins other species in virgin birth
A Komodo dragon named Flora proved last week that you don't always have to wait for your prince to start a family. Though she lives in the Chester Zoo in England with just her sister, Nessie, the 8-year-old virgin laid a clutch of fertile eggs last spring. After a long incubation period, five baby Komodos finally hatched.
Source: www.philly.com
Where Do Constitutional Modalities Come From? Complexity Theory and the Emergence of Intradoctrinalism
This article seeks to shed light on one of the most vexing and important problems in constitutional law and theory: how courts interpret the Constitution. Part I of the article begins by recounting the major theories of how courts should interpret the Constitution. Part I then explains why many scholars agree that Philip Bobbitt's modal approach has best addressed this problem. According to this approach, courts and lawyers use six modalities or methods to interpret the Constitution. Part I concludes by pointing out that Bobbitt's framework, though helpful, fails in two respects: it fails to explain where these modalities come from and it fails to explain how courts resolve modal conflicts (i.e., cases involving conflicts between two methods of interpreting the Constitution). Here, we come to a central purpose of my article, to fill in these two holes in Bobbitt's framework. To the best of my knowledge, there is only one other article that takes on this task, an article by Ian Bartrum recently published in the William and Mary Bill of Rights Journal. Part II summarizes how Bartrum's article seeks to use metaphor theory to resolve these two problems in Bobbitt's framework. Part II concludes that although Bartrum's use of metaphor theory represents a significant advancement in the debate over this issue, Bartrum's account is still incomplete because it does not capture the unpredictability and randomness in the emergence of new modalities. Part III proposes that complexity theory, with its focus on the unpredictability and non-linearity of complex systems, provides a better way of understanding the creation of new modalities. After providing some background on the leading complexity theories, this section argues that modal conflicts are instances of legal chaos, analogous to far-from-equilibrium systems in thermodynamics, in which complex forces resonate to produce outcomes that are ex ante unpredictable. The final section, Part IV, explores precisely how complexity theory can apply to cases involving modal conflicts. In describing different types of modal conflicts, Part IV argues that some conflicts create so much legal chaos that they generate new modalities altogether. Part IV offers an example of such an emerging modality, a modality that I have named "intradoctrinalism." When a court applies this modality, it interprets a particular doctrine in a way that makes all of the court's doctrines logically cohere. I argue that this modality might explain a very important case in church-state law, Locke v. Davey, 540 U.S. 712 (2004). The paper concludes with some reflection on how complexity theory can apply to other legal problems, such as how courts can reconcile conflicts between competing legal regimes. The paper thus has both a narrow purpose, to use complexity theory to fill in the gaps in Bobbitt's modal approach, as well as a broader purpose, to advance complexity theory as a means of examining legal problems in general. With this broader purpose, the paper stands alongside recent efforts to place complexity theory at the forefront of the debate over how to explain social phenomena.
Source: works.bepress.com
Carnal Knowledge | What fuels the hatred of homosexuality?
Psychologist Jonathan Haidt wants to help liberal types like me understand why some people condemn homosexual relationships as immoral. As an exercise, he says, imagine that a neighbor has installed a sign in her front yard reading Cable television will destroy society. You ask her to explain, and she responds: "Cables are an affront to the god thoth. They radiate theta waves, which make people sterile."
Source: www.philly.com
Sex quiz: Test your Carnal Knowledge
The past year brought us more shocking insights into the world of sex: from the secret lives of Komodo dragons to new hope for erectile dysfunction, from progress in the long-standing puzzle about human/Neanderthal sex to scientific confirmation of the tricks of pickup artists.
Source: www.philly.com
Carnal In making a match, must men really try harder?
In an article titled, "Why Women Aren't Funny" in this month's Vanity Fair, Christopher Hitchens writes, "The chief task in life that a man has to perform is that of impressing the opposite sex. . . . Women have no corresponding need to appeal to men in this way. They already appeal to men. . . ."
Source: www.philly.com