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Sunday, September 18, 2022

Meaning of Constitution in Phenomenology

In philosophical phenomenology, the verb "to constitute" or the word "constitution" is central in describing how things receive their meaning. Constitution in phenomenology always involves a two-fold action of matching a “constituent” with a “constituted”. This is somewhat similar to Saussure's signifier and signified. Constitution is not the act of mentally producing an object in the world, but the act by which a sense of object is formed in the course of experience. This notion of constitution is associated with Husserl's Intentionality.

 

In phenomenology, constitution is manifested as the counterpart of the phenomenological reduction. This means that after with reduce or suspend everything we think we know we are free to examine the manner in which things make themselves available to our consciousness. This means it is also associated with how Husserl viewed appearance and apprehension. The act of constitution can be defined as the return to the actual being of the object, before knowing anything else about it. 

 

Constitution and Constitutive Subjectivity

The phenomenological notion of constitution is tied with that of subjectivity (see Transcendental Subjectivity and the Transcendental I ). Subjectivity is the platform on which things are constituted into objects of perception. In the "natural attitude", this type of constitutive subjectivity or consciousness is unaware of itself in designating things in the "Lifeworld".

For later phenomenologists like Emmanuel Levinas, constitution is something that always involves a relation with another which mediates the relation to things in the world and to subjectivity itself. 

 

Back to: What is Phenomenology? or to Things Themselves: Easy Intro to Husserl's Phenomenology