dations and facets of a Constitution,” the constitution itself, even its explicit
text alone is not able to work properly: “So the visible constitution necessarily
tional task is to interpret the constitution, but also on all the people who are
For him, there are two levels of invisibility: trivial and genuine invisibility.
Ibid.
Ibid.
This research was supported by the Ministry of Education and the National Research Foundation
Is the Invisible Constitution Really Invisible?
321
genuinely invisible principles that a “vast majority of educated citizens” would
agree with in the context of the American constitutionalism: “government of
the people, by the people, for the people,” “government of laws, not men,”
“rule of law,” and so on.
5
Quite naturally, he also argued that this invisible part of the constitution
can be organized or evolved through historical and cultural processes of for-
mation
6
identified in at least “six distinct but overlapping modes of construc-
tion:” geometric, geodesic, global, geological, gravitational, and gyroscopic.
7
Professor Tribe attempted to justify his quest for the invisible constitution
by saying that “My hope is to nudge the nation’s constitutional conversation
away from debates over what the Constitution says and whether various con-
stitutional claims are properly rooted in its written text and toward debates
over what the Constitution does. Put otherwise, I hope to shift the discussion
from whether various constitutional claims are properly rooted within the
Constitution’s written text to whether claims made in its name rightly describe
the content, both written and unwritten, of our fundamental law.”
8
11.1.2. A Point of Comparison: Dicey’s Distinction
of Two Elements of the Constitution
In following Professor Tribe’s quest for the invisible constitution, I happened to
recall a dualist conception of the constitution made by a renowned Victorian
jurist, Albert Venn Dicey, who has been regarded as a founding authority of
British constitutionalism. He defines constitutional law or the constitution as
“all rules which directly or indirectly affect the distribution or the exercise of
the sovereign power in the state.”
9
These rules include “all rules which define
the members of the sovereign power, all rules which regulate the relation of
such members to each other, or which determine the mode in which the
sovereign power, or the members thereof, exercise their authority.”
10
He inten-
tionally used the word “rules” instead of “laws” to “call attention to the fact that
the rules which make up constitutional law, as the term is used in England,
include two sets of principles or maxims of a totally distinct character.”
11
5
Ibid.
, 28.
6
From this observation, it may be assumed that the boundary of the invisible constitution varies
according to the history and culture of each country it governs.
7
Ibid.
, 155 ff (Tribe).
8
Ibid.
, 22.
9
A. V. Dicey, Introduction to the Study of the Law of the Constitution (Indianapolis: Liberty
Fund Inc., 1982) cxl.
10
Ibid.
, cxl.
11
Ibid.
, cxl.