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Habitus Revisited: A Reply to Cary Nederman
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 July 2016
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In a recent Traditio article, Cary J. Nederman has added another valuable study to the series of papers he has been publishing over the past few years. This body of work has the laudable goal of showing that, across the twelfth century, thinkers were taking an increasingly Aristotelian line in the fields of ethics and political theory, on the basis of ideas transmitted indirectly via works available in Latin well before the appearance of the integral Latin translations of the texts of the Stagirite deemed to have launched the “Aristotelian revolution” of the thirteenth century in these fields. Throughout this burgeoning oeuvre, Nederman has been quite successful in supporting his case for a more gradual and less cataclysmic reception of Aristotle in the Latin West than the standard accounts acknowledge. It is not the purpose of this paper to challenge that larger argument. Nonetheless, with respect to the Aristotelian doctrine of habitus on which Nederman focuses in his Traditio article, we would like to suggest that his analysis needs to be reconsidered. We offer the following pages as an amplificatio of his thesis, with the aim of adding nuance to it by bringing forward material that he omits. Our intention here is not so much to criticize Nederman's reading of the texts on habitus in the twelfth century that he does adduce, and certainly not to object to his larger project, but rather to indicate that there is more to the story, and so to refine his analysis in the hope of strengthening it.
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References
1 Nederman, Cary J. “Nature, Ethics, and the Doctrine of ‘Habitus’: Aristotelian Moral Psychology in the Twelfth Century,” Traditio 45 (1989–90): 87–110. See also Nederman, Cary J. and Brückmann, J., “Aristotelianism in John of Salisbury's Policraticus,” Journal of the History of Philosophy 21 (1983): 203–29; Nederman, “Bracton on Kingship Revisited,” History of Political Thought 5 (1984): 61–77; “Aristotelian Ethics and John of Salisbury's Letters,” Viator 18 (1987): 161–73; “The Aristotelian Doctrine of the Mean and John of Salisbury's Concept of Liberty,” Vivarium 24 (1987): 161–73; “Nature, Sin, and the Origins of Society: The Ciceronian Tradition in Medieval Political Thought,” Journal of the History of Ideas 49 (1988): 3–26; “Knowledge, Virtue and the Path of Wisdom: The Unexamined Aristotelianism of John of Salisbury's Metalogicon,” Mediaeval Studies 51 (1989): 268–86; “Aristotelian Ethics before the Nicomachean Ethics: Sources of Aristotle's Concept of Virtue in the Twelfth Century,” Parergon n.s. 7 (1989): 55–75; “Aristotelianism and the Origins of ‘Political Science’ in the Twelfth Century,” Journal of the History of Ideas 52 (1991): 179–94.Google Scholar
A shorter version of this paper was presented at the 27th International Congress of Medieval Studies, Western Michigan University, 10 May 1992.Google Scholar
2 Nederman, “Nature, Ethics, and the Doctrine of ‘Habitus’,” 94–110.Google Scholar
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37 See, for example. Odo of Ourscamp, Quaestiones, pars altera q. 313, ed. Pitra 2: 140.Google Scholar
38 Alan of Lille, Regulae 87.3, 90.1–2, ed. Häring 193, 197.Google Scholar
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