Moran Husserls Phenomenology of Habit2011
Moran Husserls Phenomenology of Habit2011
Moran Husserls Phenomenology of Habit2011
1, January 2011
Hume then gives habit an extended role beyond the subject in that it is involved
in the constitution of the world as meaningful (something which Husserl
particularly applauds).
Habit was also a matter of interest to the nineteenth-century psychologists,
including William James,7 for whom habit is the enormous fly-wheel of
society, its most precious conservative agent.8 Twentieth-century Anglophone
philosophy has discussed habit under the title of knowing how, which Gilbert
Ryle, for instance, presented as a kind of ability, a complex of dispositions.9
Others such as Polanyi or Fodor have preferred to speak in terms of tacit
knowledge,10 whereas Bertrand Russell and others have spoken of knowledge
by acquaintance. Unfortunately, standard accounts of habit in philosophy have
traditionally ignored the contribution of Edmund Husserl.11
Habit became an important and recurrent theme in twentieth-century
sociology from Max Weber to Pierre Bourdieu.12 Bourdieu13 has discussed what
he calls habitus in a number of studies, characterizing it as a set of systems
of durable transposable dispositions, structured structures predisposed to
function as structuring structures principles that organize and generate
practices and representation,14 an acquired system of generative schemes.
Bourdieu sees habitus as an overlooked structuring principle or force, which
generates objectively real social distinctions not through deliberate intervention
of agents, but through a kind of dispersal. One can think, for instance, of the
classifications that have appeared in record shops such that broad
differentiations such as rock, folk and so on have been progressively
differentiated into heavy metal, classic rock, folk-rock, indie, world
music and so on. Bourdieu has been criticized for over-emphasizing the
objectivist side and underplaying the role of individual agency in the adoption
and promulgation of habits.
In fact, Bourdieu does explicitly acknowledge his debt to Husserl,15 along
with the contributions of Alfred Schtz, Max Weber, Marcel Mauss,16 LviStrauss, and Norbert Elias (who discussed psychic and social habitus in the
evolution of European manners17). In a 2001 reply to critics, Bourdieu claims
that his aim [is] to integrate phenomenological analysis into a global approach
of which it is one phase (the first, subjective phase), the second being the
objectivist analysis.18 He is critical of Husserl for locating habitus within the
54
domain of conscious subjectivity and for failing to give habit the status of
practical knowledge.19 More generally, Bourdieu believes that phenomenology
offers at best a complicitous description of the life-world, i.e. a description of
surface features that does not uncover the underlying structures and forces at
work. Thus he writes that the
prerequisite for a science of commonsense representations which seeks to be more than a
complicitous description is a science of the structures which govern both practices and the
concomitant representations, the latter being the principal obstacle to the constitution of such a
science.20
Habit, finally, has resurfaced as a matter of intense interest and debate in the
philosophy of action and of the cognitive sciences, where it is often linked with
a kind of skilful coping that does not need explicit conscious representation.21
Hubert L. Dreyfus, for instance, draws liberally on Merleau-Pontys
phenomenology of motor intentionality and Heideggers analysis of everyday
being-in-the-world to articulate a conception of everyday expertise, which
prioritizes bodily response and claims to avoid a Cartesian intellectualist and
representationalist construal.22 Dreyfus has been drawn into a debate with John
McDowell on precisely the amount of conceptuality, deliberation and
responsiveness to reasons involved in this everyday coping, or what Aristotle
and McDowell call practical intelligence or practical wisdom (phronesis).23
Both agree that habitus involves a certain degree of generalization (that its
practicality and conceptuality is situation-specific), but they disagree about the
amount of intelligent purposiveness and awareness involved. Dreyfus argues that,
for an expert practitioner, the action must be a form of absorbed coping (where
no degree of self-aware ego is prominent), whereas McDowell insists on practice
being permeated by a degree of self-awareness. Much depends on the conception
of egoic involvement at stake here, and this is one of the issues that Husserl has
carefully addressed in his analyses. He maintains, for instance, that self-reflection
presupposes an unreflected consciousness.24 Unfortunately, neither McDowell
nor Dreyfus specifically addresses Husserls contribution in their debate.25
Disambiguating Different Conceptions of Habit
Given our brief survey of recent theoretical approaches, it is evident that
there is a pressing need for philosophers of mind and action to describe carefully
and to distinguish between various kinds of habitual and routine behaviour:
between instinctive and reflex reaction, natural corporeal tendency or
mannerism, learned and incorporated skill, expert practice, and so on. Habits
may be, on the one hand, individual, corporeal, perceptual, and personal, or, on
the other hand, social, cultural, collective, historical and traditional. Habits can
be good (e.g. daily exercise) or bad (e.g. smoking); there is a historical evolution
of habits (e.g. eating habits), and there is a great fixity and resistance to change
so that habits may be said to be intensely conservative.
55
mechanical or automatic, a matter of sheer mindless repetition. Nor, as MerleauPonty points out, is habit a matter of intellectual knowledge, an outcome of
explicit deliberation or informed by the representation of reasons or ends.
Rather it is a kind of embodied praxis that is actually extremely individualized.
Each individual has his or her own style.32 That is not to say that habit has
nothing to do with rational deliberation and intellectual scrutiny. There are
intellectual habits bedding down or burning in good practices and
procedures, e.g. reading a poem every day, learning a new French word,
performing the phenomenological epoch, and so on. Developing or changing
a habit, moreover, may require deliberation and scrutiny. Giving up or resisting
a habit, e.g. smoking, requires the development of new habits, new overriding
and deflective routines. It also requires a certain second-order stance towards
my first-order instincts: I desire to smoke; I desire to stop smoking; I desire to
curb my desire to smoke. Indeed, almost one hundred years ago, Husserl
specified these lower and higher order relationships involving habits. In Ideas
II he writes:
the personal Ego constitutes itself not only as a person determined by drivesbut also as a
higher, autonomous, freely acting Ego, in particular one guided by rational motives Habits
are necessarily formed, just as much with regard to originally instinctive behaviouras with
regard to free behaviour. To yield to a drive establishes the drive to yield: habitually. Likewise,
to let oneself be determined by a value-motive and to resist a drive establishes a tendency (a
drive) to let oneself be determined once again by such a value-motiveand to resist these
drives.33
57
edited by Iso Kern (especially Husserliana volumes XIV and XV); in Husserls
Phenomenological Psychology lectures of 1925 (Husserliana IX), and
elsewhere.
Delineating the Concept of Habit in Husserl
Habit, for Husserl, picks out an extraordinary range of complex behaviour,
both individual and social, both corporeal and cultural. Habits first and foremost
attach to individuals understood as persons: Each individual has his or her
habits (Jedes Individuum hat seine Gewohnheiten).67 I am who I am on the
basis of my habits. The ego is a substrate of habitualities. There are different
perceptual manners (Habitus), from simple seeing to the kind of pictureconsciousness (Bildbewusstsein) one operates in looking at a painting or
postcard of a subject.68
For Husserl, in his elaborate and multi-layered analyses, habits operate not
just at the level of perceptual experience (where we group similar experiences
together in various regulated ways), at the level of the embodied self, but also
at the level of judgments and what Husserl calls convictions (berzeugungen).
When I make a decision, this is not just an atomic element of my knowledge,
but it actually affects my whole self. I become, as Husserl puts it, abidingly
thus-and-so decided.69 For Husserl, these convictions attach themselves to the
ego. I become a Labour-supporter, etc. These convictions become possessions
or havings of an ego. Having a conviction is not at all the same as
remembering that one once decided something. Furthermore, what was decided
can be returned to and reactivated without having to run through the associated
judgments of evidence. Through these convictions, I have the constituted sense
of being as a fixed and abiding personal ego (als stehendes und bleibendes
personales Ich).70 As Husserl puts it in Intersubjectivity volume XIV:
I am not only an actual but I am also a habitual ego, and habituality signifies a certain egoic
possibility, an I can or I could, or I would have been able to, and this ability become actual
refers to ego-actualities, to actual ego-experiences, that is, as actualization of ability. In a word,
I am (and without this would not be an I, I can not think of myself otherwise), an ego of
capacities.71
Husserl occasionally talks as if the ego were an empty I-pole (Ichpol) that
simply guarantees continuities in my experience (in the manner of the Kantian
transcendental ego), but in fact, in Cartesian Meditations and elsewhere, he
speaks of the fully concrete ego which is always laden with habitualities and
world-engaging acts. Husserl talks about a style (Lebensstil)72 and indeed an
overall style (Gesamtstil).73 Thus, in Cartesian Meditations 32, Husserl
introduces the term habitus as an enduring state whereby I can be said to
abide by my decision. The decision informs me. Through these acquired
decisions as convictions I constitute myself as a stable and abiding ego,
someone with, Husserl says, a personal character.74 These habits are not just
61
individual episodes. But, at this point, Husserl does not explore in greater detail
the nature of the intentional processes that go to make up the sense of similarity,
identity, and so on.
By 1912, however, as exemplified in Ideas II, Husserl has identified the
notion of habit (Gewohnheit), especially in 54-56 where he is discussing
motivation as the fundamental lawfulness of spiritual life (Die Motivation
als Grundgesetz der geistigen Welt). Here again he explains habit in terms of
the functioning of a primitive association (Assoziation) which functions
unnoticed in our comportment. The seeing of A reminds us of the seeing of
B; the similar motivates the similar under similar circumstances.81 Many years
later, in Cartesian Meditations 39, Husserl discusses association as a
principle of passive genesis. Association is never blindly mechanical for
Husserl; intentionality is always involved.82 The true nature of association can
be understood only in terms of eidetic laws, not empirical laws: association is
a fundamental concept belonging to the transcendental phenomenology.83
Association is a concept that Husserl takes from the empiricists (specifically
Berkeley and Hume) but which he construes as a feature of transcendental life
rather than a matter of empirical regularity. In fact, Husserl regularly criticizes
Hume and the empiricists for their mechanical concept of association (and
Scheler makes similar criticisms in his Formalism in Ethics).84 Husserl accuses
Hume of circularity in attempting to understand habit in terms of causality,
while at the same time explaining causality in terms of custom and habit.85 One
has to be careful in linking Husserls notion of Habitus or Habitualitt too
closely to Hume. It has been pointed out that German translations of Ferguson
and Hume often rendered custom or habit as Fhigkeit or Art.86 Husserl
himself usually employs Gewohnheit in reference to Humes habit, e.g. he
characterizes Hume as talking about the empirical-psychological laws of
association and habit (Assoziation und Gewohnheit) as regulating
experience.87 Indeed, Husserl had already recognized Berkeley as explaining
natural causality in terms of habitual association and expectation
(Erwartung).88 For Husserl, Hume is a philosopher who explains the laws of
nature in terms of laws of habit which simply belong to human nature as such.89
Particularly in his mature writings (especially in his Passive Synthesis
lectures90 and Experience and Judgment) Husserl portrays association and
passive synthesis as operating across the whole of psychic life, but as particularly
dominant at the pre-predicative level. There are various kinds of association.
One is a kind of part-whole synthesis. In Passive Synthesis he writes:
The part demands the wholesomething uniform awakens something else that is uniform,
which is not yet at all constituted as a unity explicitly for itself; and it does not demand the
whole by a pure and simple awakening, but rather by a co-connected expectation, by the
demand as coexisting as co-belonging to the unity. Even the force of this apperceptive
expectation increases with the number of instancesor with habit, which amounts to the
same thing.91
63
66
Similarly, he claims that It is not easy for us to overcome the primeval habit
(die urwchsige Gewohnheit) of living and thinking in the naturalistic attitude
and thus of naturalistically falsifying the psychical.124 And again:
Experience as personal habitus is the precipitation of acts of natural, experiential position-taking
that have occurred in the course of life (Erfahrung als persnlicher Habitus ist der Niederschlag
der im Ablauf des Lebens vorangegangenen Akte natrlicher erfahrender Stellungnahme). This
habitus is essentially conditioned by the way in which the personality, as this particular
individuality, is motivated by acts of its own experience and no less by the way in which it
takes in foreign and transmitted experiences by approving of or rejecting them.125
There is, furthermore, a difference between the habit (Habitus) of the natural
man in his daily living, and that of the phenomenologist. The mature Husserl
has a sense of habitus as forming an essential part of the character or attitude
of natural life and also of expressing the self-consciously adopted stance of the
phenomenologist. Husserl speaks of the theoretical habitus126 of the scientist
and philosopher and even of the habitus of the epoch.127 In a supplement
written around 1924 to the Basic Problems of Phenomenology, Husserl writes:
The habitus of the phenomenological epoch is a thematic habitus, for the sake of obtaining
certain themes, the discoveries of theoretical and practical truths, and to obtain a certain purely
self-contained system of knowledge. This thematic habitus, however, excludes to a certain
extent the habitus of positivity. Only in its being closed off to the latter does it lead to the selfcontained unity of phenomenology as first philosophy, the science of transcendental pure
subjectivity.128
Similarly, Hubert Dreyfus presents his Heidegger- and Merleau-Pontyinspired account of absorbed coping as a deliberate overcoming of Husserls
supposedly Cartesian philosophy of consciousness and representationality,
whereas in fact the mature Husserl recognizes the complexity of functioning
intentionality working anonymously, and has himself described the kind of
embodied habitus (leiblicher Habitus) which is later described in more detail by
Merleau-Ponty.
University College Dublin
References
1. Edmund Husserl, Ideen zu einer reinen Phnomenologie und phnomenologischen
Philosophie. Zweites Buch: Phnomenologische Untersuchungen zur Konstitution, hrsg.
Marly Biemel, Husserliana IV (Dordrecht: Kluwer, 1991), trans. R. Rojcewicz and A.
Schuwer as Ideas pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and to a Phenomenological
Philosophy, Second Book (Dordrecht: Kluwer, 1989). Hereafter Ideas II, followed by
English pagination, Husserliana (hereafter Hua) volume and German pagination.
2. See E. Husserl, Zur Phnomenologie der Intersubjektivitt. Texte aus dem Nachlass, Hua
XV, xxxviii. Iso Kern (The Hague: Nijhoff, 1973).
3. See the entries by Gerhart Funke, Gewohnheit and Habitus, in Historisches Wrterbuch
der Philosophie, ed. J. Ritter et al (Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 19712007), Band III, p. 616 and p. 1123.
4. It has been suggested that hexis in Greek never means mindless routine but suggests a degree
of awareness and self-possession in action. Aristotle also uses both hexis and ethos and some
have suggested that hexis is better rendered by disposition while ethos is translated as habit.
However, in the tradition, hexis was translated as habitus in Latin whereas ethos was translated
consuetudo.
5. David Hume Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding, in Enquiries Concerning Human
Understanding and Concerning the Principles of Morals, edited by L. A. Selby-Bigge, 3rd
edition revised by P. H. Nidditch (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1975), Section 5 Part 1.
6. Hume Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding, op. cit.
7. See Richard Cobb-Stevens, Association and Sameness in Jamess Principles of Psychology,
in Michael DeArmey, Lester Embree, and Stephen Skousgaard, eds. The Philosophical
Psychology of William James (Washington: University Press of America, 1986), pp. 95-111.
8. William James, Principles of Psychology (1890), as quoted in Bill Pollard, Habitual Actions,
in Timothy OConnor and Constantine Sandis, eds. , A Companion to the Philosophy of Action
(Oxford: Blackwell, 2010), pp. 74-82, see p. 76.
9. See especially Gilbert Ryle, The Concept of Mind (London: Hutchinson, 1949), Chapter 2 on
Knowing How and Knowing That and Chapter 5, Section 3, on capacities and tendencies.
But see Jason Stanley and Tim Williamson, Knowing How, Journal of Philosophy, vol. 98
no. 8 (2001), pp. 411-444, who want to claim that knowing-how is really a sub-species of
knowing-that.
10. See Jerry Fodor, The Appeal to Tacit Knowledge in Psychological Explanation, Journal of
Philosophy 65 (1968), pp. 627-640, and Michael Polanyi, Tacit Knowing, in his The Tacit
Dimension (Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Co, 1966).
11. Husserl is, for example, omitted from Timothy OConnor and Constantine Sandis, eds, A
Companion to the Philosophy of Action (Oxford: Blackwell, 2010).
12. For a discussion of the sociological and anthropological background to Bourdieus conception
of habit, see David Schwartz, The Sociology of Habit: The Perspective of Pierre Bourdieu,
OTJR: Occupation, Participation and Health, vol. 22, No. 1 (Winter 2002, Supplement), pp.
615-695.
71
13. See especially the chapter Structures, Habitus, Practices in Pierre Bourdieu, The Logic of
Practice (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1990), pp. 52-65; and idem, The Genesis of
the Concepts of Habitus and Field , Sociocriticism, vol. 2 no. 2 (1985), pp. 1124; and idem,
Outline of a Theory of Practice (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1977). See also
the critical discussion of Bourdieu in Habit or Habitus? in Andrew Strathern, Body Thoughts
(Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1996), pp. 25-40.
14. Bourdieu, The Logic of Practice, pp. 53.
15. See the excellent assessment by C. Jason Throop and Keith M. Murphy, Bourdieu and
Phenomenology: A Critical Assessment, Anthropological Theory, vol. 2 no. 2 (2002), pp.
185207.
16. Marcel Mauss classic essay on this topic is Techniques du corps, Journal de Psychologie,
vol. 3 no. 2 (1935), pp. 271-93, trans. Ben Brewster as Techniques of the Body, Economy
and Society, vol. 2 no. 1 (1973), pp. 70-89.
17. See Norbert Elias, ber den Prozess der Zivilisation, 2 vols (Basel: Suhrkamp, 1939), trans.
Edmund Jephcott, The Civilizing Process, vol. I, The History of Manners (Oxford: Blackwell,
1969), and Vol. II, State Formation and Civilization (Oxford: Blackwell, 1982); revised
edition in one volume by Eric Dunning, Stephen Mennell et al (Oxford: Blackwell, 2000).
Elias has a long discussion of the evolution of what he calls the European habitus over
centuries, including modes of speech, eating habits, use of cutlery, personal habits (e.g.
blowing ones nose, spitting), dressing for dining and bed, mannerisms, and so on.
18. See Pierre Bourdieu, Response to Throop and Murphy [a response to C. Jason Throop and
Keith M. Murphy, Bourdieu and Phenomenology: A Critical Assessment], in
Anthropological Theory, vol. 2 no. 2 (2002), p. 209.
19. See Pierre Bourdieu, Pascalian Meditations (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2000),
pp. 81-82. For his account of Husserls Habitus and Habitualitt, Bourdieu refers specifically
to Husserls Experience and Judgment, 12 and Ideas II, 29.
20. See Pierre Bourdieu, Outline of a Theory of Practice, p. 21.
21. For an indication of how habit and skilful coping have returned centre stage in the cognitive
sciences, see, inter alia, Andy Clark, Skills, Spills, and the Nature of Mindful Action,
Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences, vol. 1, no. 4 (2002), pp. 38587; Louise M.
Antony, How to Play the Flute, Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences, vol. 1, no. 4
(2002), pp. 395401; and Michael Wheeler, Reconstructing the Cognitive World: The Next
Step (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2005).
22. See Hubert L. Dreyfus, Intelligence without Representation: the Relevance of Phenomenology
to Scientific Explanation, Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences, vol 1, no. 4 (2002),
pp. 36783; and his Refocusing the Question: Can there be Skilful Coping without
Propositional Representations or Brain Representations? Phenomenology and the Cognitive
Sciences 1, no. 4 (2002): 41325. But see also Evan Selinger & Robert P. Crease, Dreyfus on
Expertise: The Limits of Phenomenological Analysis, Continental Philosophy Review, no. 35
(2002), pp. 245-279; and Sean Dorrance Kelly, Grasping at Straws: Motor Intentionality and
the Cognitive Science of Skilful Action, in Jeff Malpas & Mark Wrathall (eds), Heidegger,
Coping, and Cognitive Science (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2000), pp. 161-177.
23. See Hubert Dreyfus, Detachment, Involvement, and Rationality: Are we Essentially Rational
Animals? Human Affairs, vol. 17 (2007), pp. 101109; and idem, Overcoming the Myth of
the Mental: How Philosophers Can Profit from the Phenomenology of Everyday Expertise,
Presidential Address, Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association,
vol. 79, Issue 2 (November 2005). See John McDowells reply, What Myth? Inquiry, vol.
50 no. 4 (2007), pp. 338-351; and his Response to Dreyfus, Inquiry, vol. 50 no. 4 (2007),
pp. 366- 370. Dreyfus has further replied in his Response to McDowell, Inquiry, vol. 50 no.
4 (2007), pp. 371-377.
24. See Ideas II 57.
25. Hubert L. Dreyfus offers a somewhat caricatured Cartesian account of Husserl in his Beingin-the-World (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press., 1991). For a way in which McDowell could
72
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
35.
36.
37.
38.
39.
40.
41.
42.
43.
44.
45.
46.
47.
accommodate Husserl, see Carleton B. Christensen, From McDowell to Husserl and Beyond,
Self and WorldFrom Analytic Philosophy to Phenomenology (Berlin: Walter de Gruyter,
2008), pp. 362-379.
See Bill Pollard, Explaining Actions with Habits, American Philosophical Quarterly, 43 (
2006), pp. 57-68. It is not clear why Pollard regards alcoholism as automatic given that it is
possible for alcoholics to avoid drinking alcohol. Similarly, cognitive therapies of various
kinds can be effective in treating phobias. A degree of ego-involvement must be allowed in
these conditions. See also his Habitual Actions, in Timothy OConnor and Constantine
Sandis, eds, A Companion to the Philosophy of Action (Oxford: Blackwell, 2010), pp. 74-82.
See Jean-Paul Sartre, The Transcendence of the Ego (New York: Noonday Press, 1957), p. 48f.
See Hua XIII 76. In this sense, certain gestures, facial expressions, mannerisms of various
kinds exemplify an individuals style.
See for instance, Iris Marion Young, Throwing Like a Girl: A Phenomenology of Feminine
Body Comportment, Motility, and Spatiality in her collection, Throwing Like a Girl
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1990), pp. 141-159; and Maxine Sheets-Johnstone,
Kinesthetic Memory. Theoria et Historia Scientiarum, no. 7 (2003), pp. 69-92.
See Ideas II 61.
Edith Stein, Zum Problem der Einfhlung (Halle: Buchdruckerei des Waisenhauses, 1917,
reprinted Mnchen: Verlagsgesellschaft Gerhard Kaffke, 1980), p. 56; trans. Waltraut Stein,
On the Problem of Empathy (The Hague: Nijhoff, 1964; 3rd ed., reprinted Washington, DC:
ICS Publications, 1989).p. 51.
See Ideas II 61.
Ideas II 59, p, 267; Hua IV, p. 255, translation modified.
See M. Merleau-Ponty, Phnomnologie de la perception (Paris: Gallimard, 1945), trans. C.
Smith as Phenomenology of Perception (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1962). Henceforth
PP followed by page number of English translation followed by the pagination of the original
French edition.
PP 82/97. There are four occurrences of habitus in this text: PP 137/160; 293/339; 327/377.
Merleau-Ponty speaks both of a bodily and a cultural habitus. He also speaks more generally
about habit (lhabitude).
PP 293/339.
PP 82/97-98.
PP 143/167.
PP 143/168.
PP 144/169.
See PP 146/172.
PP 238/275-76.
A. Schtz, Der sinnhafte Aufbau der sozialen Welt (1932; reprinted Frankfurt am Main:
Suhrkamp Taschenbuch Verlag, 1974), trans. George Walsh and Frederick Lehnert as
Phenomenology of the Social World (Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 1967;
London: Heinemann, 1972).
See Alfred Schtz, Type and Eidos in Husserls Late Philosophy, in Schtz, Collected
Papers III, op. cit., pp. 92-115.
See Alfred Schtz and Thomas Luckmann, Die Strukturen der Lebenswelt, trans. Richard M.
Zaner and H. Tristram Engelhardt, Jr., The Structures of the Life-World (Evanston, IL:
Northwestern University Press, 1973), pp. 135ff.
Alfred Schtz and Thomas Luckmann, The Structures of the Life-World, op. cit., p. 144.
See Max Scheler, Der Formalismus in der Ethik und die materiale Wertethik. Neuer Versuch
der Grundlegung eines ethischen Personalismus, vol. 1 (1913); vol. 2 ( 1916), now in
Gesammelte Werke, ed. Maria Scheler, Band 2 (Bern/Mnchen: Francke Verlag, 1954); trans.
Manfred S. Frings and Roger L. Funk as Formalism in Ethics and Non-Formal Ethics of
Values. A New Attempt Toward a Foundation of An Ethical Personalism (Evanston, IL:
Northwestern University Press, 1973), p. 514.
73
48. See Pierre Bourdieu, The Habitus and the Space of Life-Styles, in Distinction: A Social
Critique of the Judgement of Taste, trans. Richard Nice (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press, 1984), pp. 169-215.
49. See Eugen Fink, Operative Concepts in Husserls Phenomenology, translated by William
McKenna, in William McKenna, Robert M. Harlan, and Laurence E. Winters, eds., Apriori
and World. European Contributions to Husserlian Phenomenology (The Hague: Nijhoff,
1981), pp. 56-70.
50. Husserl is not particularly consistent in his terminology. The term Gewohnheit, for instance,
does not occur at all in Cartesian Meditations.
51. The term Habitus occurs in everyday German, formed from the Latin, and has the meaning
of manner or even mannerism, e.g. he has a funny manner (Er hat einen komischen
Habitus). I am grateful to Sebastian Luft for pointing this out.
52. See Hua XIV 195.
53. On Husserls use of the word Habe and its etymological connection with habitus see Dorion
Cairns, Conversations with Husserl and Fink, ed. Richard Zaner (The Hague: Nijhoff, 1976),
p. 7.
54. See Edward Casey, The Ghost of Embodiment: On Bodily Habitudes and Schemata, in Donn
Welton, ed., Body and Flesh (Oxford: Blackwell, 2000), pp. 207-225.
55. Hua XIV 195.
56. See Hua VII 145.
57. E. Husserl, Ideen zu einer reinen Phnomenologie und phnomenologischen Philosophie.
Erstes Buch: Allgemeine Einfhrung in die reine Phnomenologie, 1. Halbband: Text der 13. Auflage, hrsg. K. Schuhmann, Hua III/1 (The Hague: Nijfohh, 1977), trans. F. Kersten,
Ideas pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and to a Phenomenological Philosophy, First
Book (Dordrecht: Kluwer, 1983). Hereafter Ideas I, followed by the English pagination and
Hua volume number and pagination of German edition.
58. Ideas I p. xix; III/1 5; see also 108. See also Phen. Psych. 5 (Hua IX 55) where Husserl
speaks of the habits (Gewohnheiten) of natural scientific thinking. He speaks of such
Denkgewohnheiten also at 24 IX 142, where these scientific habits have been transferred to
psychology.
59. Ideas I 33. By contrast, Ideas I mentions Habitus only once at 96; III/1 224, where
Husserl speaks in a positive sense of the phenomenological habit of inner freedom.
60. Husserl, Phnomenologische Psychologie Vorlesungen Sommersemester 1925, ed. W. Biemel
(The Hague: Nijhoff, 1968), Hua IX 6; trans. J. Scanlon, Phenomenological Psychology.
Lectures, Summer Semester 1925 (The Hague: Nijhoff, 1977). Hereafter Phen. Psych.,
followed by pagination of English and then Husserliana edition.
61. Phen. Psych. IX 136; see also 41 Hua IX 206, where he speaks of the ego as a pole of
activities and habitualities, Das Ich als Pol der Aktivitten und Habitualitten. Husserl speaks
positively of the personal subject of habits (Hua IX 286). Similarly, in Crisis he speaks of
the specific activity and habituality of the functioning ego (Aktivitt und Habitualitt des
fungierenden Ich, Crisis VI 109); and of the peculiarities of human life and human
habitualities (Crisis VI 141n). Every ego has to be considered as an ego pole of acts and
habitualities (als Ichpol seiner Akte und Habitualitten und Vermgen, Crisis VI, 187).
Husserl, Die Krisis der europischen Wissenschaften und die transzendentale
Phnomenologie, ed. W. Biemel, Hua VI (The Hague: Nijhoff, 1962), trans. David Carr, The
Crisis of European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology. An Introduction to
Phenomenological Philosophy (Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 1970). Hereafter
Crisis, followed by the English page number and then the German page number.
62. Hua IX 278; 315.
63. See e.g. Crisis 67.
64. Edmund Husserl, Cartesianische Meditationen und Pariser Vortrge, hrsg. Stephan Strasser,
Hua I (The Hague: Nijhoff, 1950), trans. D. Cairns, Cartesian Meditations (Dordrecht:
Kluwer, 1993). Hereafter CM followed by pagination of English and then Hua edition.
74
75
95.
96.
97.
98.
99.
100.
101.
102.
103.
104.
105.
106.
107.
108.
109.
110.
111.
112.
113.
114.
115.
116.
117.
118.
119.
120.
121.
76
122. E. Husserl Philosophie als strenge Wissenschaft, originally Logos. Internationale Zeitschrift
fr Philosophie und Kultur 1 (19101911), pp. 289341, reprinted in Hua vol. XXV; trans.
M. Brainard, Philosophy as a Rigorous Science, New Yearbook for Phenomenology and
Phenomenological Philosophy II (2002), pp. 249295. Hereafter PRS with English
pagination, followed by German pagination of original.
123. PRS p. 253/294; Hua XXV 8-9.
124. PRS p. 271/314; Hua XXV 31.
125. PRS p. 284/329; XXV 48.
126. Hua XXVIII 402.
127. Hua XIII 208.
128. See E. Husserl, The Basic Problems of Phenomenology from the Lectures, Winter Semester,
1910-1911, trans. Ingo Farin and James G. Hart (Dordrecht: Springer, 2006), p. 123; Hua
XIII 208: Der Habitus der phnomenologischen Epoche ist ein thematischer Habitus, um
gewisse Themen, Wahrheitserkenntnisse, theoretische und praktische, zu gewinnen und ein
gewisses rein in sich geschlossenes Erkenntnissystem. Dieser thematische Habitus schliesst
zwar in gewisser Weise den der Positivitt aus: nur in seiner Abgeschlossenheit gegen den
letzteren fhrt er zur abgeschlossenen Einheit einer Phnomenologie als der Ersten
Philosophie, als der Wissenschaft von der transzendental reinen Subjektivitt.
129. See Hua XIV 399: Aber durch phnomenologische Reduktion setze ich die Welt auer
Geltung, nur mein Welterfahren, mein Weltglauben, -ausweisen, meine entsprechende
Habitualitt usw. bleibt erhalten, eben als rein Subjektives
130. See Crisis Hua VI 331.
131. See Hua XV 55.
132. Indeed, Bourdieus articulation of habitus has been criticized as lacking theoretical rigour and
even for being a kind of deus ex machina invoked to solve certain problems.
133. EU 12.
134. Crisis 53.
135. See EU 12.
77