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Habitus

Habitus is spelled the same as and has meanings derived from the Latin word habitus, also defined at Wiktionary.

It is sometimes used in academic and technical fields to select one specific sense of the word "habit" or to designate a meaning distinct from the many senses of the word "habit". For example, habitus is a method of intentionally discerning and practicing a new habit. For the use in sociology see habitus (sociology)
In biology, the term is sometimes used to denote a phenetic similarity in external morphology or the characteristic mode of growth or occurrence of an organism (see also ecomorphology)
In medicine and psychology, susceptibility to certain types of physical disorders associated with particular body constitution types
In medieval philosophy, especially Duns Scotus, William of Ockham, and Thomas Aquinas use the term in a way derived from Aristotle as a behavioral manifestation of the essential nature of a thing or a person
In contemporary philosophy, used by Gilles Deleuze to denote a self-organising system or "abstract machine" functioning on the plane of immanence

Other uses

A Latin surname or cognomen
Habitus: A Diaspora Journal
Habitus, a 1998 novel by James Flint (British novelist)

Source: Wikipedia

Translation

The word "Habitus" occurs as such in the following languages: English, Czech, Danish, German, French, Dutch, Norwegian (Bokmål), Slovak.


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