Description |
1 online resource (327 p.) |
Series |
Routledge Research in Phenomenology Series |
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Routledge Research in Phenomenology Series
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Contents |
Cover -- Half Title -- Series Information -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- List of Contributors -- Introduction: The Epistemic Relevance of Broken Habits -- Bibliography -- Part 1 The Double-Sidedness of Habit -- 1 Me, My (Habitual) Self, and I: A Phenomenological Account of Habitual Identity -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 A Phenomenological Account of Habit Formation -- 1.3 Situated Habit: Resilience, Resistance, and Responsibility -- 1.3.1 Habitual Identity and Resilience -- 1.3.2 Habit and Resistance -- 1.3.3 Habit and Responsibility |
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1.4 Me, My (Habitual) Self, and I: A Performative Theory of Habit -- Notes -- Bibliography -- 2 The Eidetic Phenomenology of Habits According to Paul Ricoeur -- 2.1 Ricoeur's Eidetic Phenomenology -- 2.2 The Paradox of Habits: Between Automatism and Freedom -- 2.3 Conclusion: The Foundational Structure of Habits -- Notes -- Bibliography -- 3 Ideal and Real Habits After Husserl -- 3.1 Plural Habitus: Concrete Reason in the Tension Between Real and Ideal Habits -- 3.2 Ideal Habits as Habitus Scientiae -- 3.3 Habituation: The Real Side of Habits -- 3.4 Conclusion -- Notes -- Bibliography |
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4 Intentionality and the Power of Habit -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Definitory Aspects of Habit -- 4.3 Habit Formation and Reinforcement Learning Systems -- 4.4 Intentionality and Habits -- 4.5 Habit Elicitation -- 4.6 Habit Control -- 4.7 Intentionality, Goal-Directed Action, and Habit Control -- 4.8 Summary -- References -- Part 2 Social and Technological Disruptions of Habitual Life Forms -- 5 Social Habits and Their Breakdowns -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Habit and Habituation -- 5.3 Habits and Societies -- 5.4 Everyday Breaches -- 5.5 Anomie and Suicide -- 5.6 Protest and Public Debate |
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5.7 Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 6 Are You Gaslighting Me?: The Role of Affective Habits in Epistemic Friction -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 What Is Gaslighting? -- 6.3 Physiological and Affective Habits -- 6.4 Epistemic Habits -- 6.5 Are You Gaslighting Me? -- Notes -- References -- 7 Smart Worlds and Broken Habits: A Contextual Analysis of the Technological Relations of Post-Phenomenology -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Background Ideas: Affordance Spaces and Informational Flows -- 7.3 Classic Post-Phenomenology and Ihde's Four Human-technology Relations |
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7.4 The Embodiment Relation-and a More Contextualized Approach -- 7.5 Interlude On Aspects of the "World" and Ihde's Telephone Case -- 7.6 Interlude On Multistability, Navigation Between Affordances and the Cyborg Relation -- 7.7 Hermeneutic Relations -- 7.8 Alterity Relations -- 7.9 Background Relations -- 7.10 Verbeek's "Immersion" Relation -- 7.11 Verbeek's "Augmentation Relation" -- 7.12 Extra-Contextual Information Flows, Hidden Audiences and Context Collapse -- 7.13 Conclusion -- Notes -- References |
Summary |
This volume explores the phenomenology of broken habits and their affective, social, and involuntary dimensions. It shows how disruptive experiences impact self-understanding and social embeddedness |
Notes |
Description based upon print version of record |
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Part 3 Transformative Experiences and the Possibility of New Habits: De-Habituation and Re-Habituation |
Subject |
Habit breaking.
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Behavior modification.
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Habit (Philosophy)
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Mertens, Karl
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ISBN |
9781040094341 |
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1040094341 |
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