Constitution
Constitution
in the Roman Church, a decree of the pope in matters of doctrine. In France, the name has been applied, by way of eminence, to the famous bull Unigenitus of the year 1713. SEE UNIGENITUS.
Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature
Constitution
Agreement between the ruler and people.
Deu 17:18-20; 2Sa 5:3; 2Ch 23:2-3; Jer 34:8-11; Dan 6:12-15
Fuente: Nave’s Topical Bible
Constitution
(Ger. Konstitution) In Husserl1. Broader senseIntentionality in its character as producing, on the one hand, intentionally identical and different objects of consciousness with more or less determinate objective senses and, on the other hand, more or less abiding ego-habitudes (see Habit) is said to be “constitutive”; its products, “constituted” (q.v.). The synthetic structure of the constitutive process, regarded either as a static or as a temporally genetic affair, is called the constitution of the intentional object. 2. Narrower senseThe structure of intentionality in its character as rational, i.e., as productive of valid objects and correct, justified, habits (convictions, etc). See Evidence and Reason. — D.C.