The constraints of habit: craft, repetition, and creativity

Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 24 (1):251-271 (2025)
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Abstract

The nature of craft creativity has often been ignored in research which focuses on innovative and novel ideas and thought processes. This view of creativity casts the repetitive nature of craft as antithetical to the disruptive nature of genuine creativity. Drawing on combined enactivist and pragmatist accounts of habits and on a focused cognitive ethnography of a wooden bowl turner, this paper explores the nature of the constraints wrought by habitual action. Habitual action will be shown to be less repetitive than may be initially assumed because of the uncertainty inherent in working with both the wood which forms the initial material and the tools necessary to transform it. Rather, this paper proposes habitual learned movements as an important concept in a pragmatist-informed theory of creativity since they mark the skilled co-ordination of material, tool and maker, at once constraining and enhancing the creative craft process.

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The Principles of Psychology.William James - 1890 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 11 (3):506-507.
Experience and Nature.John Dewey - 1925 - Mind 34 (136):476-482.
The Principles of Art.R. G. Collingwood - 1938 - Philosophy 13 (52):492-496.
Experimentation and Scientific Realism.Ian Hacking - 1982 - Philosophical Topics 13 (1):71-87.

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