The internalization of parts through structures is the formation of an internal continuity of the law from the external discontinuity of the decision on the
exception. Since the internal continuity is constituted power and the external discontinuity is constituent power, then this internalization is a subsumption of constituent power by constituted power. The law appears as transcendent and it obscures the decision on the exception which is immanent. On the other hand, the externalization of parts through free agency allows for a recognition of the immanent relationship between reality in itself and the formation of structures such as the law. The process where the law is created from the decision on the exception is in fact one external discontinuity of parts and a difference between many internal continuities of relationships.