Selective incorporation
Total or Mechanical Incorporation (sometimes also called complete incorporation), which was championed by Justice Hugo Black. The US Supreme Court uses "selective incorporation," however.For more information, see Related Questions, below.
Total or Mechanical Incorporation (sometimes also called complete incorporation), which was championed by Justice Hugo Black. The US Supreme Court uses "selective incorporation," however.For more information, see Related Questions, below.
Total Incorporation or full incorporation
Total incorporation (sometimes called "mechanical incorporation" or "complete incorporation") would apply the first eight amendments of the Bill of Rights (the Ninth and Tenth aren't individual rights; the Ninth isn't triable) to the states as a single unit via the Fourteenth Amendment, as some constitutional scholars argue was the original intent. The US Supreme Court has elected to use a process called selective incorporation, which applies individual clauses to the states via the Fourteenth Amendment Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses, as needed.
Partial incorporation
If this is for apex, the answer is no incorporation
Total incorporation was the theory that the Fourteenth Amendment created a broad but undefined set of rights.
Total incorporation was the theory that the Fourteenth Amendment created a broad but undefined set of rights.
Today only a theory is generally adopted: the big bang theory.
Galileo
The US Supreme Court upholds and protects the integrity of the Constitution, at least in theory.
It was his theory. When data was finally collected (near his death), it was found that his theory was (sort of) wrong.