[Xmca-l] Re: Fwd: Peirce's Approach to Pluralism and System

lpscholar2@gmail.com lpscholar2@gmail.com
Fri Sep 2 15:19:30 PDT 2016


Alfredo, Christopher, Andy, Chuck, 
I will start where Christopher paused and add in additional commentary in a way similar to Alfredo’s additions. My comments will be read within brackets as response:
With the terms institute (verb) & institution something new or something already instituted (Merleau-Ponty in particular is focusing on something as  transformation of *meaning*) seems like an essential part (aspect) of what has solidified (crystallized) or *formalized* it's relationship to the whole. (Peirce, with whom we opened this thread focused on (inclined towards or accented formalized systematized logic). 
Perizhivanie accents or inclines towards emotional ways personality comes into being. It was this focus on emotion as institution in particular that drew me into Kym’s article. As she makes clear there are both public and personal aspects of institution and her article is limited to this side of the public/personal notion of institution.

Mike mentions M-P uses the term *constitution* over 200 times in the Phenomenology of Perception. 
Kym’s article is drawing out that he was using the same word *constitution* to mean both *constitution* and *institution* and it was only in his later works he came to make a clear distinction in his *Institution & Passivity* lecture course.
Kym is using the resources of this later work to go back and re-read *The Phenomenology of Perception* with this new way of seeing the two distinct ways M-P had previously used the one word *constitution*. In Kym’s own words:
“ My aim in this essay is, drawing upon Merleau-Panty's mid-career writings, including the lectures on institution, to bring out the full force of the aphenomenology’s claim that passionate feelings and behaviors – what I will call emotions – are institutions.”

Kym is using what she refers to as the *new organs of perception* (given the new resources of the Institution lectures to go back and re-read through M-P’s earlier works to better understand emotion as institution. There are personal, intersubjective, and public history forms of institution which M-P emphasizes cannot be separated.
However, for the purposes of Kym’s more limited project of this essay the focus or weight is on the personal side.
That is to say in her words,
“transformational moments within our personal and intersubjective lives where a new configuration of meaning and a new form of agency is inaugurated – and on what M-P calls the *subterranean logic* of this development. 

The term (subterranean) implies that these transformational meanings and agentic shifts come from *beyond* the subject and are not the result of the subject’s own *constitutive powers*.

My reading of the meaning of constitution is that it was doing double duty and M-P is gesturing to this subterranean process (a back and forth bi-directional movement of regression and anticipation) that requires something else termed an *event* that occurs beyond or in excess of the constituting subject. This excess is an *undergoing*  event of happening that transforms *meaning* that does not yet exist but is coming into existence.
Kym says many M-P scholars see a *break* in M-P’s earlier works focusing on the theme of the logic of *experience* and later works inclining towards the logic of *institution*.
Kym rejects this understanding, seeing a continuity between *experience* and *institution* and that experience remains central in M-P’s later works.
M-P’s central accounts of the experience of learning, creative expression, the acquisition of habit, the coming to be of color perception, and geometrical insights are explored in *The Phenomenology*.
Kym is showing us the same logic of experience in these earlier accounts can be understood as putting together the same logic of institution elaborated in his later lectures.
Here are some terms M-P uses in his earlier work inclining towards the meaning of *institution* but not yet explicitly:
*establishment
*foundation
*everlasting acquisition
And Husserl’s favourite word *Stiftung*

In summary, M-P is focusing as Mike says on a bi-directional movement of regression to already instituted forms of meaning and anticipation of overcoming these anticipated forms by travelling THROUGH these received forms but sensing their limits. A key term for M-P is *excess* meaning that overflows (or permeates) received forms but must journey or travel through the received forms. 
Active consciousness is not enough, *events* that are unforseeable also happen leading to transformations of meaning (growing new sense organs).

I am fascinated with Peirce and his displeasure with plural systems yet who admired Schelling who could start anew in the true spirit of science.

Last comment: Kym 1st elaborates the institution of (artistic expression) then elaborates the institution of (perception) in preparing an understanding of *institution*
With this understanding in place she turns toward *emotion* as institution.

All this is preamble in anticipation of exploring perezhivanie in the upcoming journal as an extended and expanded focus on emotion and meaning potential.



Sent from my Windows 10 phone

From: Christopher Schuck
Sent: September 1, 2016 9:42 PM
To: ablunden@mira.net; eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
Subject: [Xmca-l] Re: Fwd: Peirce's Approach to Pluralism and System

Perhaps three additional ways (or small pieces of the puzzle) for
interpreting the distinctions between these two concepts as discussed in
the last two posts:

1) With "institute," the introduction of something *new* (or transformation
of something such that something new is brought into the world) seems like
an essential part of what has solidified or formalized its relationship to
the whole. So the emphasis would not be on the part-whole relationship so
much as the element of introduction, its being *new* and qualitatively
different than before. As Oxford put it, to "start" or initiate something.

2) "Constitute," despite having possible social or procedural
applications, sounds ultimately more metaphysical ("make (by combining
elements) or to make some existing thing what it is..."), whereas
"institute" seems more expressly connected to a social practice, in
formally connecting something with a larger project or teleological kind of
activity. This would speak to the "official" aspect Andy mentioned.

3) Although this is probably not faithful to the etymology, I can't help
but think of an ongoing self-regulating or self-maintaining process,
whereby something once instituted has been *activated *such that it
continues to maintain and perpetuate itself. So it is not only new, but
living and active in some way.

Just brainstorming here.

Chris

On Thu, Sep 1, 2016 at 10:31 PM, Andy Blunden <ablunden@mira.net> wrote:

> Mike, I have not followed this thread or focussed on your earlier posts on
> this topic, but I do use both these words, so I guess this is an opportune
> moment to see if I know what I'm talking about.
>
> Constitution
> According to the 20 volume Oxford English Dictionary, the verb 'to
> constitute' comes first, dating from 1477.
> Constitute: Originally to set in a specified place or situation or
> appoint, then to set in an office or position of authority but in more
> recent times (e.g. Grottius) to found or establish, give legal or official
> shape to, to frame, make (by combining elements) or to make some existing
> thing what it is, and then to make up, compose etc. So it seems to have
> begun much like 'institute'.
>
> When I use it I think I mean that specific elements or relations which
> independently come to exist and voila! we have this new thing which is
> constituted by this conjuncture. Maybe the thing already existed, but you
> have analytically pulled them apart to find what was essential to the
> thing. So it's about the relation of a complex thing to its "constituent"
> parts. But it's nothing particular to do with a wider situation.
>
> Institution
> Again, the verb 'to institute' came first, in 1475.
> Institute: To set up, establish, found, ordain; to introduce, bring into
> use or practice. To set in operation, set on foot, initiate, ‘start’ (a
> search, inquiry, comparison, etc.).
>
> As you suggest, Mike, "institute" has this connotation of "launching"
> something, so to me it's more a relation of a thing to the larger whole. So
> something may exist, but as you say it is just "in the flow" of things, but
> then it is "instituted" so it becomes something solid, part of the whole.
> It remains what it is, but it is now official, so to speak.
>
> Andy
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> Andy Blunden
> http://home.mira.net/~andy
> http://www.brill.com/products/book/origins-collective-decision-making
> On 2/09/2016 10:25 AM, mike cole wrote:
>
>> That is a very difficult meshwork of ideas to think about, Larry. In so
>> far
>> as I follow the bidirectional path you are on, the overall idea seems
>> plausible enough.  Its parsing the parts that is bothering me. In
>> particular, i am trying to parse the use of constitution and institution
>> in
>> the system of human experience you describe.
>>
>> Institution is at the crystalized end of bits of structure in the flow of
>> experience. It would seem reasonable to think about constitution as its
>> heglian other, the fluid, "becoming" part.
>>
>> It seems, however, that constitution gets a bad rap in the conversation
>> because it is linked to agency and agency to individual agency. Is that
>> the
>> rap on M-P's uses of the term? There were some 260+ uses of the term in
>> Phenomenology of Perception, and I am reading it in English, so the task
>> of
>> disambiguating is a tad beyond my reach.
>>
>> Constitution also has an interesting linkage to events. If you go to a
>> central square of Athens you discover that it is called Syntagma Square.
>> Constitution Square. But syntagma is also the root of the word syntagmatic
>> which contrasts with paradigmatic in descriptions of language. As the
>> google dictionary puts it, syntagmatic means "the relationship between two
>> or more linguistic units used sequentially to make well-formed
>> structures."
>> Which leads people like Catherine Nelson to talk about "event schemas"
>> which in turn she relates to acquistion of culture.
>>
>> Anyway, I am still finding the distinction of constitution and institution
>> difficult to work with. I lean strongly to the both/and line of reasoning
>> in such matters, but one still has to be able to specify various objects
>> that can be both/and!
>>
>> mike
>>
>> On Fri, Aug 26, 2016 at 9:07 AM, <lpscholar2@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> Mike, Alfredo,
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I also am dipping my toe into this topic or theme so will explore with
>>> you
>>> what this means and where this meaning leads us as we walk along the path
>>> that Kym Maclaren opens before us.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Vygotsky said, the word is the direct manifestation of the historical
>>> nature of consciousness.
>>>
>>> What if Vygotsky had said,
>>>
>>> Human consciousness is the direct manifestation of the historical nature
>>> of the word.
>>>
>>> There seems to be 3 parts or elements here in the way or arrangement or
>>> combination that are determining the actual existing order.
>>>
>>> 1)      The word
>>>
>>> 2)      Human consciousness'
>>>
>>> 3)      The in-between
>>>
>>> We can post that human consciousness is the direct manifestation of the
>>> nature of the word
>>>
>>> OR
>>>
>>> We can post that the word is the direct manifestation of the nature of
>>> human consciousness
>>>
>>> OR
>>>
>>> We can post that both the word and human consciousness manifest (arise)
>>> simultaneously within the **in-between**
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Each of these frameworks shifts what is primary and where we focus
>>> attention.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> The next question: thinking life defines **itself** through
>>> consciousness.
>>>
>>> Is **thinking life** itself -life itself?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> OR is thinking life itself emerging from somewhere that is subterranean.
>>> Life itself may **exceed** thinking life itself.
>>>
>>> The thinking life **defines** itself, gives definition to itself through
>>> frameworks that are instituted ( a word used I think to go beyond
>>> thinking
>>> life defining **itself**). Events must also be considered and events
>>> occur in happenings not of our own choosing.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> The actual existing order and the way in which anything is **made up**
>>> determine the things nature and character. Merleau Ponty and Kym Maclaren
>>> are inviting us to use the model of institution to become clearer on the
>>> distinctions with other Models of **made up**.  Now the tension between
>>> **made
>>> up** and **making up** (the coming to be and the overcoming of the limits
>>> of the currently available **made up** are also central to Merleau
>>> Ponty’s model.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> The actual existing order (of meaning) is in tension with meaning *
>>> *potential** that is over the horizon but coming to be. It is only
>>> retrospectively that we come to see the newly instituted order and we
>>> arrive at this new order **through** the old order.
>>>
>>> This is a language of frame/works and trans/form/ation of meanings in
>>> which we dwell.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> The emotional institutions that are being realized (coming to
>>> consciousness) are becoming realized/instituted  within a subterranean
>>> process which come to fruition within events beyond the purview of the
>>> **I
>>> think**. To have this transformation come to consciousness occurs after
>>> the happening of the event.
>>>
>>> However, the arising of the new institution arises **through** the older
>>> crystallized institution that is overcome.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> The dialectic that these emotional institutions **undergo** is driven not
>>> by self-reflection (which is retrospective) but by events (contingency,
>>> back and forth repetion, the living indeterminate ambiguous relations of
>>> being in the world with actual others within the older frame/work of
>>> habituated meaning AND this **movement** occurs in a subterranean way
>>> (beyond) I think -itself. This movement beyond the I think -itself is a
>>> back and forth movement of regression to older frameworks and
>>> anticipation
>>> of newer frameworks which arise/arrive when events happen that
>>> crystallize
>>> a new emotional institution on it's way to becoming overcome.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Mike, Alfredo,
>>>
>>> Within M-P’s model meaning **cores** and meaning **potential** shift
>>> within **events**.
>>>
>>> Meaning is also central to perezhivanie and therefore  the paths of
>>> institution and perezhivanie may possibly interweave as occurring in the
>>> realm of the **in-between** where both objectiv/ity and subjectiv/ity
>>> arise simultaneously.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Through dialogue both the meaning of  institution and perezhivanie  (
>>> meanings which we come to inhabit) may become clearer
>>>
>>> Possibly?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Sent from my Windows 10 phone
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> *From: *mike cole <mcole@ucsd.edu>
>>> *Sent: *August 25, 2016 4:38 PM
>>> *To: *Larry Purss <lpscholar2@gmail.com>
>>> *Cc: *eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity <xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu>
>>> *Subject: *Re: [Xmca-l] Fwd: Peirce's Approach to Pluralism and System
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Thanks very much for that extended discussion of constitution and
>>> institution, Larry. Unfortunately, I am not as versed as you or Alfredo
>>> in
>>> phenomenology so I can only keep asking my xmca101-style questions.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I have the *Phenomenology of Perception*, but not those lectures you
>>> refer to which I gather are titled *Institution and Passivity.  *I also
>>> downloaded the Maclaren article which I have read through, but remain
>>> stuck
>>> back near the starting gate.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I can see several ideas that I recognize and perhaps appreciate to a
>>> small
>>> extent. The idea of entre-deux is strongly reminiscent of Vygotsky's
>>> comment at the end of the *Thinking and Speech:*
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> “In consciousness, the word is what *–– *in Feuerbach’s words *–– *is
>>> absolutely impossible for one person but possible for two. The word is
>>> the
>>> most direct manifestation of the historical nature of human
>>> consciousness”
>>> (Coll. Works, Vol. 1, p. 285).
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I still have not put my mind around connecting this thought with the
>>> thought quoted by Alfredo:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> "Consciousness arises out of life and forms only one of its features. But
>>> once awakened, thought itself defines life. Or more accurately, a
>>> thinking
>>> life defines itself through consciousness" (Vygotsky, 1993, p. 237).
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> In trying to understand your, M-P's, and Maclearen's ideas I struggle
>>> with
>>> the definition (theory) of constitution which it seems I have to
>>> understand
>>> well in order to understand how the term institution is being used.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> You and Maclearen spend more time talking about institution and I am
>>> getting hung up on what is mean there.  I gather what is being critiqued
>>> is
>>> a notion of constitution that has an individual agent making something
>>> up.
>>> This is what I take away from
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> A focus for M-P in all his work is a critique of the philosophy of
>>> consciousness with it's central theme of a constituting subject and the
>>> language of constitution to express **coming to be**. In his earlier work
>>> he is still using the same term **constituting** to express these two
>>> distinct meanings. The intellectualist notion of coming to be AND also
>>> using **constitution** when  speaking of a new way of coming to perceive
>>> a perceptual object.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> My own history of experience of the word constitution does not have the
>>> strong "intellectualist bias" of assuming a constituting subject. Rather,
>>> it seems closer to this definition cadged from the OED:
>>>
>>>
>>> The way in which anything is constituted or made up; the arrangement or
>>> combination of its parts or elements, as determining its nature and
>>> character; make, frame, composition. *constitution of nature*,
>>> *constitution
>>> of the world*, *constitution of the universe*, *constitution of things*
>>> (the
>>> actual existing order); so *constitution of society*, etc.
>>>
>>> In this sort of definition, there is no claim about a constituting
>>> subject. Rather, it seems compatible, at least, with Maclearen's account
>>> when she writes:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> This account of emotion proposes itself as a refutation of a philosophy
>>> of
>>> consciousness and the idea of a constituting subject.  *For the emotional
>>> institutions that are realized in our lives constitute us as much as or
>>> more than we constitute them;*
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I have not been able to figure out what it means when Maclearen writes
>>> that *the dialectic that these institutions undergo *is a process driven
>>> not by self-reflection and the subject’s unilateral constitution of
>>> meaning, but by contingency, repetition, and the indeterminate but
>>> fundamental question that our being in the world with others both poses
>>> and
>>> secretly, implicitly, ambiguously strives to work out.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I'll try to resolve these questions so that I can link up more
>>> effectively
>>> with a lot in your message and the discussion of the centrality of events
>>> along with Alfredo's invocation of
>>>
>>> Politzer that I have long thought important. Any help you can offer with
>>> respect to constituting gratefully accepted.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> mike
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Thu, Aug 25, 2016 at 2:14 PM, <lpscholar2@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> Mike,
>>>
>>> The question:
>>>
>>> What is Merleau-Panty's notion of institution versus constitution?
>>>
>>> My answer will go through Kym Maclaren and how she developed an answer to
>>> this question.
>>>
>>> Kym Maclaren wrote a paper *The Entre-Deux of Emotions: Emotions As
>>> Institutions (available at academia.edu) that explores the way M-P in
>>> his
>>> book (The Phenomenology of Perception) used the term **constitution** to
>>> mean two different things ( two different meanings or relational
>>> notions).
>>> As his philosophy developed he came to distinguish the meaning of *
>>> *constitution** from the meaning of **institution**. He elaborated this
>>> distinction in his lecture course on **institution**. (referred to as the
>>> **Institution Lectures**.
>>>
>>> Kym takes the meaning of institution developed in these lectures and
>>> turns
>>> back to the Phenomenology to show how M-P was at this earlier period
>>> using
>>> the same term  **constitution** with two distinct meanings. He had not
>>> yet found the vocabulary to make a clear distinction between constitution
>>> and institution.
>>>
>>> I believe this distinction may be relevant in the coming conversation on
>>> the meaning of perezhevanie.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Kym and M-P are moving away  from a focus on either consciousness as
>>> primary or of the objective world as primary to refocus on the *
>>> *entre-deux** (the in-between) as primary. This shift of focus where NOT
>>> a subject, but events, endow experience with **durable** or *
>>> *crystallized** or **instituted** forms of meaning in relation to which
>>> (as themes) a whole series of other experiences will make sense (will
>>> form
>>> a thinkable sequel (a history).
>>>
>>> This institution is the creative endowment of meaningful dimensions that
>>> provide frameworks for further sense-making and this  movement allows new
>>> perceptual objects to emerge/arise within experience. It is this creative
>>> movement M-P comes to call institution in his later Institution Lectures.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> The question then becomes:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> How do events do this work of instituting? Kym says M-P’s lectures on
>>> institution explicitly and clearly express the subterranean logic of
>>> institution at work in events. This logic is subterranean because it
>>> operates outside the knowledge & intentions of the subject.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> When institution occurs -when a new dimension of meaning (that sets the
>>> terms) for future development occurs – we can then and only then see *
>>> *retrospectively** how the past anticipated the future, anticipated this
>>> development, and answered the question posed by the past. When the
>>> question
>>> is posed the answer’s meaning is only potential, in the realm of the
>>> not-yet but could-be.
>>>
>>> What is central is that this perspective is **accessible** only from the
>>> standpoint of the new institution. – only retrospectively.. The past did
>>> not contain it's own answer. The answer **exceeds** the past, transforms
>>> the very terms with which the past functioned and this answer could never
>>> have been predicted or forseen – from THAT past. (even though it answers
>>> to
>>> THAT past).
>>>
>>> In other words, it is only retrospectively that it is even clear what we
>>> were asking (what question was being posed).
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> In exchange for what we had imagined, life gives us something else (that
>>> M-P says was secretly wanted and subterranean). REALIZATION is not what
>>> was
>>> forseen, but all the same, was wanted or desired.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> THIS IS THE PLACE TO PAUSE AND STOP READING AS THE OPENING ANSWER TO
>>> MIKE’S QUESTION. Institution goes through events, not subjects or
>>> objects.
>>> To read  on is my attempt to summarize Kym’s way of developing the notion
>>> of emotion as institution. I believe her approach has merit but I may be
>>> saying more than was asked.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> In Kym’s paper she 1st turns to two other forms of institution (artistic
>>> expression) and (perception) in order to show concretely  how the logic
>>> of
>>> institution is distinct from the logic of constitution. I will not get to
>>> these concrete examples but will introduce the topic.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Kym  shows how this logic is already at work in the Phenomenology as a
>>> central theme. However, at this earlier point he referred to both logics
>>> as
>>>   constituting logic. It is his quest to clarify these two distinct
>>> meanings
>>> of constitution  that are worked out in the Institution lectures and
>>> institution is given its own vocabulary as distinct from the vocabulary
>>> of
>>> constitution
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I will give an outline of the points Kym Maclaren develops in her
>>> reflections on emotion as institution that critiques  emotion as
>>> constitution:
>>>
>>> The notion of institution is the way in which M-P seeks to criticize
>>> intellectualism with it's idea of a constituting subject and offer an
>>> alternative account of subjectiv/ity that may be a resource for
>>> understanding perezhivanie and **ity**.
>>>
>>> Kym is asking us to think about emotion as institution. Emotional
>>> transformation on this institutional account needs to be understood as
>>> coming from **beyond** the subject, rather than being the result of the
>>> subject’s own autonomous powers..
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> For the constituting subject the meaning of its object comes into being
>>> on
>>> the basis of the subject’s own powers. The object is only a reflection of
>>> the powers and acts of that autonomous consciousness.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> In the place of this notion of  a constituting subject M-P argues for a
>>> conception of a subject who animates him/her self with another meaning
>>> and
>>> this other meaning coming into form as transcendent meaning transforms
>>> the
>>> person who  comes to dwell within this meaning.
>>>
>>> To dwell within the person’s **I think** and in his/her body is analogous
>>> to the way  meaning dwells in a book or dwells in a cultural object.
>>>
>>> M-P is positing **meaningful cores** (themes?)  that transcend and
>>> transfigure the persons natural powers and becoming powers of
>>> institution.
>>> These meaningful cores outstrip or overflow or **exceed** the subject and
>>> the subject is (caught up in) (dispossessed) or (exposed) by these
>>> transcendent meanings (beyond the self itself)
>>>
>>> However what is central, is that as this is occurring, the person is also
>>> taking up or resuming those transcendent meanings that help **realize**
>>> new ways of making sense of the world and others.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> A focus for M-P in all his work is a crtique of the philosophy of
>>> consciousness with it's central theme of a constituting subject and the
>>> language of constitution to express **coming to be**. In his earlier work
>>> he is still using the same term **constituting** to express these two
>>> distinct meanings. The intellectualist notion of coming to be AND also
>>> using **constitution** when  speaking of a new way of coming to perceive
>>> a perceptual object.
>>>
>>> In the Institutional Lectures M-P develops a new language to speak of the
>>> coming to be of the institution of new meanings.
>>>
>>> Institutions occur within both public history & personal/intersubjective
>>> history as two sides of the same coin. Kym stays within the
>>> personal/intersubjective side in her paper and limits her reflections to
>>> the personal/intersubjective.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> There is a similar logic of institution at work in aesthetic expression,
>>> in perception, and in emotion as ways of creative expression.
>>>
>>> Institutions are those transformative moments in our lives when a new
>>> configuration of meaning and a new form of agency is developing. M-P is
>>> exploring  the **subterranean** movement of this logic of institution.
>>>
>>> Key terms for M-P are **expression** and **perception** which involve not
>>> the constitution of a meaning by a subject but rather the institution of
>>> a *
>>> *form** in the **in-between** of embodied being and environment.
>>>
>>> The institution of a form simultaneously transforms the situation and the
>>> embodied being rather than the form being simply constituted by that
>>> being.
>>>
>>> Kym Maclaren shows that the commonly held belief that an emotional
>>> subject
>>> is constituting others and situations in terms of the subjects own
>>> conscious emotions is suspect.
>>>
>>> In contrast Kym argues the emotional situation comes to be in the *
>>> *in-between** (entre-deux) and is not the result of the subject’s own
>>> projection.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> An inherent feature of institution of forms is there own overcoming.  So
>>> emotional institution of new emotions are transformations forming new
>>> emotions in response to the older crystallized emotions.
>>>
>>> Therefore the development of one’s emotional life is not primarily the
>>> result of an autonomous subject’s reflections and constitutions.
>>> Emotional
>>> institution rather emerges out of the subterranean logic worked out in
>>> the
>>> repetition and reiteration of the tension experienced within **old**
>>> institutions. The back and forth to earlier forms and emerging
>>> forms..Emotional transformation comes largely from beyond the subject,
>>> the
>>> situation of the event facilitating the subject to develop her
>>> subjectiv/ITY rather than being the result of her own autonomous
>>> constituting powers.
>>>
>>> M-P speaks of a subject investing and animating subjectiv/ity with
>>> another
>>> meaning that transforms the subject and which is transcendent to this
>>> person’s  current subjectivi/ity. (i.e. Succeeds in making a meaning
>>> which
>>> dwells in her **I Think** and in her body as a meaning dwells in a book
>>> and a meaning dwells in a cultural object.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> In the Institution Lectures M-P develops a language that better
>>> emphasizes
>>> and clarifies the **passivity** of the subject and the ways in which the
>>> meaning that the subject realizes always **exceeds** the embodied
>>> subject.
>>>
>>> M-P is contrasting the inseparability of the instituting and instituted
>>> subject and contrasts this subject with the constituting subject. M-P by
>>> the time of the institution lectures has developed a systematic language
>>> for making the distinction between constitution and institution. The
>>> institution of the subject is the **coming to be** of a new form of
>>> subjectivity in the way we can talk of new forms **coming to be** such
>>> as  (new perception, new emotion, new aesthetic expression, new object)
>>> that are becoming crystallized.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> In M-P’s earlier work (the Phenomenology of Perception) he is still
>>> conceiving the two ways of understanding the **emergence of meaning** as
>>> constitution. Institution remains more an operative concept as
>>> institution
>>> has not yet acquired  a central core  univocal voice (not yet a thematic
>>> voice in terms of which other concepts are measured).  With the benefit
>>> of
>>> the Institution Lectures in hand, Kym Maclaren is able to go back to the
>>> Phenomenology of Perception book to show the logic of institution at work
>>> in this earlier book.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> To repeat: The constituting subject is the subject of (and conceived by)
>>> intellectualism who constitutes objects.
>>>
>>> In the Phenomenology book M-P is arguing for a different kind of *
>>> *constitution** which in later works he refers to as **institution**
>>> because the sense of meaning achieved is not given by consciousness. The
>>> meaning **comes to be** in the embodied exchange between a
>>> self-in-the-making & an object-in-the-making. The coming-to-be of the
>>> subject is inseparable from the coming-to-be of the object.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> We are moving away from a focus on consciousness as primary or of the
>>> objective world as primary to a focus on the **in-between** (the
>>> entre-deux) as primary.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Not a subject but **events** endow experience with durable dimensions in
>>> relation to which a whole series of other experiences will make sense.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> To repeat institution is:
>>>
>>> This endowment of a meaningful dimension that provides a framework for
>>> further sense-making and this allows new perceptual objects to emerge
>>> **within
>>> experience** is what in M-P’s later works he come to call **institution**
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> The logic of institution is subterranean as events do this work of
>>> instituting meanings  unforseen (repeat unforseen) by the subject
>>> involved
>>> because this logic operates outside the knowledge and intentions of that
>>> subject.
>>>
>>> When institution occurs – when a new dimension of meaning that sets the
>>> terms for future developments occurs – we can see **retrospectively** how
>>> the past **anticipated** this development, how this development responded
>>> to the past and **answered a question** posed by this past.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> An interesting note is where M-P places **errors** and **failures**. In
>>> exchange for what we imagined life gives us something else that was
>>> secretly wanted. Such realization (or epiphany) comes about through
>>> errors
>>> and failures. By means of a kind of blind groping on the part of a living
>>> subject, the subject is diverted through various impasses arrived at
>>> through various investigations. And it is only retrospectively (once
>>> again)
>>> that these inquiries REVEAL their common **theme**
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Somehow, and this is the marvel of institution – all these errors and
>>> failures open up a space for a new realization, a new meaning. Errors
>>> open
>>> up a new space for a new realization can be put another way:
>>>
>>> Caught up in old crystallized institutions, we respond to the problems
>>> that present themselves by **repeating** in varios ways, those old ways
>>> of making sense. These repetitions disclose their own inadequacies,
>>> thereby
>>> opening up a space where something else, something new, something
>>> unknowingly awaited can announce itself.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> The event is that moment in which the openess that constitutes seeking
>>> without ever really knowing what the question is, something contingent
>>> arises as an occurence or an event ushering in a new way of life, a new
>>> way
>>> of seeing, a new configuration of meaning, a new institution.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Thus, any particular institution tends or inclines (with the help of
>>> contingent happenings) towards the institutions own overcoming. Though an
>>> expression of the past, institution is inherently anticipating the
>>> future,
>>> which cannot be grasped except retrospectively.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I will STOP here. Kym in her paper turns to concrete examples of human
>>> experiences to elaborate the notion of institution within artistic
>>> expression and perception. This in preparation for an understanding of
>>> emotion that follows this same logic of institution.
>>>
>>> I will just add that a logic of Eros can be explored through a logic of
>>> institution.
>>>
>>> To explore the somethings we love that becomes instituted in our deepest
>>> meanings.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> This proceeding  extended think aloud also can be intertwined with
>>> Dewey’s
>>> (having an experience). What I have left unsaid is the relation of
>>> institution to perezhivanie. M-P may have something to contribute to that
>>> notion that is now coming into form
>>>
>>> To be continued ....
>>>
>>> The question of constitution versus institution is a topic for
>>> conversation
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Sent from my Windows 10 phone
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> *From: *mike cole <mcole@ucsd.edu>
>>> *Sent: *August 24, 2016 5:29 PM
>>> *To: *eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity <xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu>
>>> *Subject: *[Xmca-l] Fwd: Peirce's Approach to Pluralism and System
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> What is MP's idea of institution versus constitution, Larry?
>>>
>>> Mike
>>>
>>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>>>
>>> From: <lpscholar2@gmail.com>
>>>
>>> Date: Wednesday, 24 August 2016
>>>
>>> Subject: [Xmca-l] Peirce's Approach to Pluralism and System
>>>
>>> To: eXtended Activity <xmca@potpourri.ucsd.edu>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> This is an extension to the engagement with Rein Raud and the mention of
>>>
>>> various ways to approach identity, subjectivity, selfhood, and
>>> personhood.
>>>
>>> >From that conversation, one of the sources to consider (but not the
>>>
>>> preferred choice) was Vincent Colapietro’s book *Peirce’s Theory of the
>>>
>>> self: A Semiotic Perspective on Human Subjectivity*
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Vincent Colapietro draws attention to the *ambiguity* and tension in
>>>
>>> Peirce’s desire to be BOTH scientific and systematic. Dispositions that
>>> are
>>>
>>> out of step with many current ways of philosophizing.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Peirce in correspondence with James confessed:
>>>
>>> Pluralism does not satisfy either my head or my heart.
>>>
>>> Yet in another letter to James he acknowledged his debt to Schelling
>>> noting:
>>>
>>> One thing I admire about him (Schelling) is his freedom from the trammels
>>>
>>> of system, and his holding himself UNCOMMITTED to any previous utterance.
>>>
>>> In that, he is like a scientific man.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Vincent notices it is all too easy for those who have studied intensively
>>>
>>> the writings of Peirce to get so  caught up in his *system* that they
>>> come
>>>
>>> to see it as a PLACE TO DWELL rather than a point from which to proceed.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I share this as an expression (a creative expression) of the way the
>>> places
>>>
>>> where we dwell *institute* us. These ambiguous places from which we move
>>>
>>> back and forth (repetition) in order to DEVELOP our self, subjectivity,
>>>
>>> identity, personhood.
>>>
>>> This circles back to perizhevanie, ity, and I will add Merleau Ponty’s
>>>
>>> notion of *institution* (in contrast to constituting).
>>>
>>> The relation of subjectivity and objectivity and the (in between)
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> This is the limit for a single post. I send this in anticipation of the
>>>
>>> next theme emerging - perezhivanie
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Sent from my Windows 10 phone
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> It is the dilemma of psychology to deal as a natural science with an
>>> object
>>>
>>> that creates history. Ernst Boesch
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>>
>>> It is the dilemma of psychology to deal as a natural science with
>>> an object that creates history. Ernst Boesch
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>



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