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Disco in my loins

To have sex to the rythem and beat of the music.

When a man's engorged member slides in and out of a womans disco hall. At the same time his shiny disco balls bang against her arse to the beat of the music being listened too and thus creating a wonderful melody of love making.
Person 1: How was last night?

Person 2: I had disco in my loins with this girl from the club. She loved it when the uptempo song came on as the beat was so fast but my disco balls feels like they have been in a boxing ring.
by Wiseone1879 December 1, 2023
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Law of Spectral Logics

The principle that logical systems exist on a spectrum between absolute and relative, with infinite gradations and multiple dimensions. Under this law, no logical system is purely absolute or purely relative—each occupies a position in spectral space defined by its universality, its cultural specificity, its domain of application, its historical development. Classical logic is near the absolute end; indigenous logic systems are nearer the relative end; most logical systems are somewhere in between. The law of spectral logics recognizes that logic is neither one nor many but a spectrum of possibilities, from the most universal to the most particular, with infinite variations in between. This law is the foundation of logical pluralism, allowing us to appreciate different systems without ranking them.
Law of Spectral Logics Example: "She mapped the world's logical systems using spectral analysis, placing them on spectra of universality, formality, cultural embeddedness, and practical application. Classical logic was high on universality, low on cultural specificity. Indigenous logic systems were the reverse. Neither was better; they were just differently positioned in spectral space. The map didn't resolve debates, but it showed why they were so persistent."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 16, 2026
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The principle that logical systems operate in two modes: absolute logic (the hypothetical set of rules that would be valid for all reasoning beings, anywhere, anytime) and relative logics (the actual systems humans use, which vary across cultures, eras, and purposes). The law acknowledges that there may be universal logical principles—the laws of thought that any rational being must follow—but that our access to them is always mediated through particular systems that are relative to our context. The law of absolute and relative logics reconciles the universalist claim that logic is one with the pluralist observation that logics are many. We reason within relative systems, always reaching toward the absolute.
Law of Absolute and Relative Logics Example: "They debated whether logic was universal or culturally constructed. He argued for absolute logic—one true system for all. She argued for relative logics—different cultures, different rules. The law of absolute and relative logics said: there may be absolute logic in theory, but we only ever encounter relative logics in practice. They agreed to keep studying, which is what philosophers do."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 16, 2026
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