Habits are repetitive patterns of behavior. Some physicists refer to "natural laws" as merely "habits", in order to avoid the implications of a Law-giver, or of Teleology in nature. Human habits vary from simple personal Routines that have been found to facilitate activities without the necessity of conscious thought. In that case, conscious thought may have been used to find a sequence of events that works for behaviors that can be done almost without thinking. For example, I divide my home-bound Covid day at home into roughly one hour chunks devoted to particular tasks in a regular sequence. This routine only works at home, because at work my time is regulated more by the needs & goals of other people. Nature's "laws" are also regular routines, where effects seem to follow causes without exception, and without forethought. That's presumably because the many possible cause/effect relationships have been worn-down to those that work best -- Darwinian survival of the fittest (for a particular situation, or niche).Interested in hearing from others better versed in Aristotle regarding the subject of "habit." — Xtrix
Agreed.I think understanding habits have to play a major role in applying various answers to the philosophical question of "What is a good life?" — Xtrix
3.6 The "will" is weak (re: akrasia, cognitive biases), so habit seems key to reliable judgment. (See. 2.61)
3.61 Cultivating (a) intellectual habits via pedagogy & discipline* and (b) moral habits via social experience & civic/political engagé, I think, expands Agency, or the capacity for judgment (i.e. adaptive conduct (see 2.62)). — 180 Proof
Habits are repetitive patterns of behavior. Some physicists refer to "natural laws" as merely "habits", in order to avoid the implications of a Law-giver, or of Teleology in nature. — Gnomon
Human habits vary from simple personal Routines that have been found to facilitate activities without the necessity of conscious thought. In that case, conscious thought may have been used to find a sequence of events that works for behaviors that can be done almost without thinking. For example, I divide my home-bound Covid day at home into roughly one hour chunks devoted to particular tasks in a regular sequence. This routine only works at home, because at work my time is regulated more by the needs & goals of other people. — Gnomon
Such habits are often done without awareness, and without conscious reasoning, — Gnomon
So, Aristotle's use of "habit" or "disposition" implies goal-directed teleology. — Gnomon
But the scientist's use of the same word is intended to signify the opposite meaning : random, meaningless, purposeless behaviors. — Gnomon
BTW, does anyone know exactly what Greek word is getting translated as "habit"? — Xtrix
BTW, does anyone know exactly what Greek word is getting translated as "habit"? — Xtrix
I merely think I understand Hume to have pointed out that justification (or reason or logic or derivation or inference) is sometimes deductive but just as often inductive (habitual or associative).
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/331201 — bongo fury
Yes. Human habits may begin as conscious voluntary behaviors, but later become subconscious involuntary (hard to quit) routines. Natural Laws are also routine repetitive predictable behaviors that are involuntary.What scientists do you have in mind? Psychologists don't talk this way. It's not that habits are "purposeless," it's that they're mostly unconscious. — Xtrix
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