
WEIGHT: 63 kg
Bust: 2
1 HOUR:100$
NIGHT: +90$
Services: Fetish, Fisting anal, Slave, Massage classic, Role playing
The main reason for writing the book The Necessity of Nature was a discovery I made in an out-of-this-world research sojourn in Australia. However, the whole thing turned out to be one of the most extraordinary experiences of my life, in terms of discovering completely new environments and people and due to the real possibilities of doing serious and focused research.
Why did I not notice that before? How is it that no one I had read in the secondary literature mentioned that either? The move from my initial study of only legalistic texts to those emerging from the initiators of the Scientific Revolution was almost instinctual.
After I ascertained that Robert Boyle had been a mentor of sorts for John Locke during his entire life, I immersed myself in the work of those mostly men proposing the New Science in England during the 17th century.
The beauty of human genius that I came upon, while not devoid of ambiguities, opened to me new vistas of the classic English natural lawyers, in particular Thomas Hobbes, Robert Boyle, and John Locke. But the book is not an elaboration on the idea that all the good times in science and law are past and gone. Initially, my research project was prompted by the aim of offering a more accurate understanding of natural law, especially to myself! The result exceeded my expectations tremendously.
I discovered the impact of natural law on the development of modern Europe economically, scientifically, and politically. Arguably this research might facilitate addressing key current issues in the era of the Anthropocene, which importantly, focuses and derive from previous transformations of the concept of nature.