The Philosophy of Sex Crime



Sex, by wrought denotation, translates within literal, classical dimensions to the word 'food'. Food is matter that imparts energy. Energy, within any reaction, can be neither created nor destroyed, so when thinking of 'sex', it is good to consider the translational principle of a biological action that shifts energy from one state to another by the conduction of the elements incorporated in its facilitation and occurrence. The degree to which the energy of the reaction, or the food element implicated, changes is contingent upon the environmental conditions of the entire scape of occurrence, but the central focus for sexual action or sexual understanding  is one that is housed in translatory principle. When a criminal act within sexual activity, then, occurs, the result is an event of wrong that originates from the improper and incorrect energy, food, or action being conducted or communicated. A sex crime is that which is described prior. It is when the energy present in a sexual occurrence is conducted improperly and wrongfully by the entities involved. This can occur in isolate or within paired and grouped settings, but the principle is one that articulates the incorrect exchange of energy initially, throughout, and/or during the activity. The philosophy behind this fundamental understanding is one that seats criminality as an occurrence of interpretable wronghood or incorrectness, and within that prose, sexuality, sexual health, and 'sex' all find emphasized meaning along the means of their associated interpretation present in the respective fieldings above.

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