The debate over constitutional Originalism continues to spark scholarly controversy. The most recent development in this contested history is the emergence of so-called New Originalism, an approach that eschews the search for the subjective intent of either the Framers or Ratifiers and instead focuses on the public meaning of the text at the time of the Founding. A somewhat under-theorized version of this theory even made a cameo appearance in Justice Scalia\u27s majority opinion in District of Columbia v. Heller. While champions of New Originalism claim to have solved the problems of traditional Originalism and identified a means of elucidating an objective meaning of the Constitution, this theory has not solved the basic problem with Or...