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abstract
Husserl’s phenomenology offers a very complex treratment of the full conscious person
as constituted out of its capacities and habitualities. Human existence develops
itself habitually through its intentional meaningful practices both individually and
communally. Habit can be found at all levels in the constitution of meaningfulness
(Sinnhaftigkeit), from the lowest level of passivity, through perceptual experience, to the
formation of the ego itself, and outwards to the development of intersubjective society
with its history and tradition, to include finally the whole sense of the harmonious course
of worldly life. Husserl uses a range of terms to express his concept of habit including:
Habitus, Habitualität, Gewohnheit, das Habituelle, Habe, Besitz, Sitte, and even Tradition.
Husserl’s account deeply influenced Ortega Y Gasset, Alfred Schutz, Martin Heidegger,
and Maurice Merleau-Ponty, and Pierre Bourdieu, among others. This paper will give an
overall analysis of Husserl’s conception of the habitual self.
keywords
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The Ego as Substrate of Habitualities
Dermot Moran University College Dublin
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The Ego as Substrate of Habitualities
Dermot Moran University College Dublin
9 For a fuller treatment of the classical treatments of habit (Aristotle, Hume) as well as for a
discussion of Husserl’s influence on Merleau-Ponty, Bourdieu, and others, see Moran (2011).
10 See also Hua IX, §5, p. 55, where Husserl speaks of the “habits [Gewohnheiten] of natural
scientific thinking”.
11 Hereafter cited as Hua III/1 with page numbers from the German text followed by those of
the English translation.
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Dermot Moran University College Dublin
Husserl employs a wide range of terms to express his concept of habit and the
habitual, including: Gewohnheit12, Habitus13, Habitualität, das Habituelle (Hua XIV, p.
195). Occasionally, he even uses the Germanized version of the Greek Hexis (Hua
XIII, p. 400; Hua XIV xxiv) and he often speaks quite generally of “possession”
(Besitz), or “having” (Habe, Hua XIII, p. 400), of a skill, a routine, or a decision, a
point of view, anything that can become literally incorporated in one’s body or
confirmed as an abiding trait in one’s character—even one that perhaps is now
cancelled out14. Most frequently, Husserl deploys adjectives (gewohnheitsmässig,
habituell) that connote the “habitual”. Generally speaking, and I am really basing
this on my own reading of the Husserliana volumes, Husserl employs the familiar
German term Gewohnheit to refer specifically to habits of thought, ways of
thinking influenced by science, psychology and so on (see also Hua VI, p. 145). In
line with his overall discussion of habit and of human capacities, Husserl deploys a
number of words including “dispositions” (Dispositionen), and “abilities” (Vermögen).
Habit is thereby intimately connected with powers, capacities, disposition,
the ability to exercise a skill, execute routines, embody successfully a range of
activities, such as playing a musical instrument, dancing, driving, reading, and so
on. Habit, for Husserl, is also connected with higher activities of the ego involving
knowledge, moral practical wisdom and the formation of a stable character, as
well as the overall achievement of a stable intersubjective life with others. In this
regard, Husserl says that the word ‘Sitte’ (custom) summarizes this idea of habitual
action and behavior in the social sphere (Hua XIV, p. 230)15. Husserl is deeply aware
of and attempts at least to sketch in outline, in his research manuscripts, as we
shall see, some of the collective social practices that contribute to the constitution
of custom and culture. In this regard, human existence involves not just bodily,
psychic and personal habits of the individual but more collective habitual states
such as the use of language, involvement in games and social practices, and the
overall capacity to belong to a “sociality” (Sozialität), the capacity to recognize,
appreciate and follow the norms and values of one’s culture—all these are
outcomes of habituality. It is through habituality that one becomes acculturated
and can live in attunement with cultural norms. Nevertheless habituality is not a
12 The term “Gewohnheit,” for instance, does not occur at all in Cartesian Meditations.
13 The Latin term Habitus is found in ordinary German with the meaning of “manner” in
the sense of mannerism, e.g. in phrases such as “he has an odd manner” (Er hat einen komischen
Habitus).
14 On Husserl’s use of the word Habe and its etymological connection with “habitus”, see
Cairns (1976), p. 7.
15 Hua XIV, p. 230: “Jedes Individuum hat seine Gewohnheiten. Wie steht individuelle
Gewohnheit und bleibende Entschiedenheit (bleibende Urteile, Werte, Entschlüsse für
das Individuum)? Sitte ist ein Titel für sozial gewohnheitsmässige Handlungen, ebenso
hat die Sprache ihre sozial gewohnheitsmässige grammatische Form, und zu allem sozial
Gewohnheitsmässigen gehört ein Sollen, das des ‘Üblichen,’ des Norm alen, sich Gehörenden.
Aber Wissenschaft und Kunst? Ist Sitte an sich schon Kultur? Sie kann in Kultur genommen
werden, möchte man sagen.”
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The Ego as Substrate of Habitualities
Dermot Moran University College Dublin
3. Especially in his Ideas II, Husserl considers the constitution of the human being,
The Starting progressively, from a number of standpoints that he normally divides into the
Point: The physical (the purely natural), the psychical and the spiritual. Human beings as
Psychic physically embodied belong to nature and are subject to natural laws, causation,
Subject as a and so on. But human beings are also psychophysical, living organisms or what
Unified Flow of Husserl calls Leibkörper that have animation, motility and so on, as directed by
Experiences psychic states and acts. Human beings are also personal subjects who interact on
the “spiritual” or cultural plane.
According to Husserl, habit, along with association, memory, and so on, belongs
to the very essence of the “real psychic subject” (Hua IV, §30), which is treated as
a subject of properties and not to be construed as identical with the “pure ego”
(das reine Ich). According to Husserl, to this psychic subject belong every personal
properly, the intellectual character of the human individual and the totality of his
or her intellectual dispositions, his/her affective character, practical character,
every one of his/her spiritual capacities and aptitudes, mathematical talent,
logical acumen, magnanimity, amiability, self-abnegation, etc. (Hua IV, p. 122/129).
Following the older tradition of descriptive psychology, Husserl is happy to call
this psychic subject “soul” (Psyche) in so far as it is understood as having a body
but not being identical with its body.
The psychic subject is essentially and by its nature in constant flux, it cannot be
considered – unlike strictly material objects—as a static entity with unchangeable
properties:
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Dermot Moran University College Dublin
insofar as they fit within the total consciousness and are, in their
total nexus [Gesamtzusammenhang], transitional points for particular
avenues or manifestation. (Hua IV, §32, p. 133/141)
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One can desire to fulfill, negate or enhance another desire. There are higher
levels of self-awareness here. One can embrace a desire (the desire for
another person, for instance) and make it not just a project (in the Sartrean
sense) but as filled with the meaning of being a central characteristic of
my own existence and character. Desires and stances towards them are all
caught up in the complexities of meaning-investment or sense-constitution.
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Dermot Moran University College Dublin
This is not a new thought for Husserl. He says something very similar much
earlier in his Ideas II:
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In all of these discussions Husserl has most interesting things to say about
the peculiar process that he calls Durchstreichung–a term more usually
associated with Heidegger and by Derrida. The concept of Durchstreichung,
crossing-out or cancellation, is actually quite common in Husserl (see Hua
XIII, p. 367; Hua XIV, pp. 124; 142, 153, etc.). For Husserl, moreover, in relation
to intentional life, what is cancelled and crossed out is still retained as
that which is crossed out. I can say that I used to have such and such as
conviction but then I abandoned it. Nevertheless, I am now both the person
20 Husserl (1938), §25, p. 137/122.
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The Ego as Substrate of Habitualities
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who (a) had the conviction (b) cancelled it and now (c) hold a different
perhaps opposite conviction. One never really leaves anything behind in
the sphere of the person; everything is taken up and carried on even in a
cancelled or modified manner. Everything is aufgehoben, to invoke Hegel’s
term that is often translated as “cancelled” or “sublated” but which Cairns
renders as “revoked”. Indeed Husserl uses this exact term when he writes in
Cartesian Meditations:
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Notice that Husserl includes “I used to be able to”. In other words, we retain
past achievements in sedimented form: I used to be able to run a five-minute
mile or whatever. Even if I can no longer do it, I remain the person who could
do it at one time.
Like Max Scheler, who discusses the stratification of our emotional life in his
Formalism in Ethics (1913), Husserl is deeply aware that our whole character
with its convictions, values and emotional stances are layered over on each
other in very complex intertwined ways. To offer one example, in Ideas II,
Husserl writes with some subtlety about the attitude involved in nursing a
grudging or harboring a resentment:
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Dermot Moran University College Dublin
Husserl often compares the formation of a stable sense of ego with the
perceptual formation of a stable sense of the perceived object. In perception,
we glimpse only profiles and adumbrations (Abschattungen) nevertheless we
constitute the perceived object as having a stable existence independent
from our perceivings. Similarly in rememberings or in forming of
resentments or grudges there is the noetic dimension and also the noematic
dimension (the grudge itself, Hua IV, p. 115). In many of his analyses Husserl
is primarily interested in what one might call the noematic dimension of
the experience–what makes a particular habit or disposition the same one
as before. But at other times he is interested in the noetic dimension, how
the grieving or grudging is constituted as such, how it relates to the ego, and
so on. Let us now consider how habit is related to the concept of “attitude”
(Einstellung).
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Dermot Moran University College Dublin
This essay is one of the key texts that introduces the idea of the natural
attitude – which of course gets its canonical formulation in Ideas I §27. In
“Philosophy as a Rigorous Science” he writes
And again:
22 Hereafter cited as ‘PRS’ with English pagination followed by pagination of the German
original and then the pagination of the German edition in the Husserliana series.
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Dermot Moran University College Dublin
23 See Husserl (2006), p. 123; Hua XIII, p. 208: “Der Habitus der phänomenologischen 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 Positivität aus : nur in
seiner Abgeschlossenheit gegen den letzteren führt er zur abgeschlossenen Einheit einer
Phänomenologie als der ‘Ersten’ Philosophie, als der Wissenschaft von der transzendental reinen
Subjektivität.”
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The key point is that Husserl believes that human beings have the capacity
not just to live within certain overall attitudes but to alter them through
an act of will. Attitudes can be changed (Einstellungwechsel) or altered or
switched (Einstellungänderung). As a result of these alterations of attitude,
new objectivities come to light. This is the key to Husserl’s “correlationism”.
Let us now turn from the individual to the social.
All lived bodies are not only bearers of sensations, etc., and “organs”
of the mind, but also are “expressions” of the mind and of the life
of the mind, and as such they are bearers of significance; they are
beaers of meaning for all interpretations, which is the condition of the
possibility of social life, being the life of the community25.
In this regard, in a text from 1921/1922, Husserl speaks not only of the
habituality that belongs to the “single ego” (Einzel-Ich), but also of “a social
habituality” (eine Gemeinschaftshabitualität), which may also be called
24 See Hua XIV, p. 399: “Aber durch phänomenologische Reduktion setze ich die Welt
ausser Geltung, nur mein Welterfahren, mein Weltglauben, -ausweisen, meine entsprechende
Habitualität usw. bleibt erhalten, eben als rein Subjektives”..
25 Husserl (2006), pp. 168-69; Hua XIII, p. 93. The German reads: “Alle Leiber sind nicht nur Träger
von Empfindungen etc. und ‘Organe’ des Geistes, sie sind ‘Ausdrücke’ des Geistes und Geisteslebens
und als solche sind sie Bedeutungsträger, Bedeutungsträger in jeder Eindeutung, die Bedingung der
Möglichkeit des sozialen Lebens als eines Gemeinschaftslebens ist.”
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Dermot Moran University College Dublin
a“tradition” (eine Tradition, Hua XIV 230)26. Husserl recognizes that both
individuals and social and ethnic groupings have their own habitus. Thus
he writes about shared physical similarities: “we count races [Rasse] in this
way in so far as the commonality of outer physical habitus goes hand in
hand with social characteristics” (Hua XIV, p. 183)27. We recognize people
on the basis of familiar patterns, family resemblances (including physical
traits), social typicalities, and so on, precisely those schemata, sometimes
called “stereotypes” (not necessarily in a prejudicial sense) by psychologists
and “types” (Type) by Husserl, Weber and Schutz. In Ideas II, Husserl writes:
“Personal life manifests a typicality, and each personal life manifests a
different one” (Hua IV, p. 271/284). I come to understand others initially
through these types—what kind of typical motivations are at play, and so on.
Husserl speaks about the self-constitution of the ego but it is important to
stress that the ego does not constitute itself solely through active stance-
taking (Stellungnahme) and being a self-reflective cogito. The ego constitutes
itself in the unity of a history and hence it is understood as living a life. The
ego arises out of ‘life’:
26 Hua XIV, p. 230 (1921/1922): “Verflechtung des Einzel-Ich und seiner Positionalität in die
Gemeinschaft : Konstitution einer Gemeinschaftshabitualität, der Tradition, die immer schon
besteht mit dem Momente der Stiftung der Gemeinschaft, da sie selbst nur ist durch Stiftung
einer intersubjektiven Habitualität oder Tradition. Das Parallele natürlich für das Einzel-Ich,
es ist nur in fortgesetzter Stiftung von Habitualität (seine individuelle Tradition) und [hat] also
auch seinen wesensmässigen Anfang (schöpferischen Ansatzpunkt) in einer ersten Stiftung,
durch sie es sich selbst als habituelles Ich stiftet.”
27 See Hua XIV, p. 183: “Die Rasse rechnen wir hierher, sofern die Gemeinsamkeit des äusseren
physischen Habitus Hand in Hand geht mit derartigen Gemeinschaftscharakteren.”
28 Hua IV, p. 252/58: “Ich bin das Subjekt meines Lebens, und lebend entwickelt sich das
Subjekt; es erfäh rt primär nicht sich, sondern es konstituiert Naturgegenstände, Wertsachen,
Werkzeuge etc. Es bildet, gestaltet als aktives primär nicht sich, sondern Sachen zu Werken. Das
Ich ist ursprünglich nicht aus Erfahrung — im Sinne von assoziativer Apperzeption, in der sich
Einheiten von, Mannigfaltigkeiten des Zusammenhanges konstituieren, sondern aus Leben (es
ist, was es ist, nicht für das Ich, sondern selbst das Ich).”
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I am the subject that is used to being pleased b y such and such matters,
that habitually desires this or that, goes to eat when the time comes,
etc., i.e. the subject of certain feelings and of certain habits of feeling,
desire, and will, sometimes passive […] sometimes active. (Hua IV, p.
256/269)
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We can now say that history [Geschichte] is from the start nothing
other than the vital movement [die lebendige Bewegung] of the being-
with-one-another [Miteinander] and the interweaving [Ineinander]
of original formations [Sinnbildung] and sedimentations of meaning
[Sinnsedimentierung]. (Hua VI, p. 380/371; trans. modified)
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