rough equality of work, followed by equality of pay. Subsequently it became Democratic justice through the right to do with ones body what one wished. At each stage, a new level of Democratic justice seemed the injustice of the day previous advances were already internalized and secured as rights automatically, therefore a new level of justice was sought.Each of these examples exemplifies both the continual nature of need fulfillment as well as the unique ability of man to conveniently forget battles won, advances made, and previous desires fulfilled, and to desire new, better, and greater fulfillments. As the continual and increasingly diverse desires and needs for Democratic justices fall further and further from their origin, however, they also become further fragmented. The environmental impact of this fragmentation is to spread the belief that society no longer reflects the needs and desires of everyone, but of special groups and individuals. Though each individual may receive their portion of equitable distribution of justice as a result of these processes, the result is a focus on the need for equality that is so extensive as to suggest that all law has to do with spelling out additional implications of the principles that all men are equal in dignity and worthbut the persistent demands of all groups to get from politics what they consider their equal share of public welfare seems often to have behind it the notion that hitherto each group has been discriminated against (and pendulously now must be discriminated for) (Davies, 1963: 51). The snowball effect, of course, applies, as the persistent belief that society discriminates (either for or against) causes a reactionary process which begins again the need to fulfill the next level of justice for whatever group seems to be disadvantaged. Summary and ConclusionIn essence the resulting process is a circular one, whereby individuals direct and fulfill their needs through res...