This article by Susana RamÃrez-Vizcaya and Tom Froese reviews the enactive approach and highlights how it moves beyond by integrating both autonomy and sense-making into its theory of agency. It defines a habit as an adaptive, precarious, and self-sustaining network of neural, bodily, and interactive processes that generate dynamical sensorimotor patterns.
Habits constitute a central source of normativity for the agent. The enactive approach views habits as constituting an interdependent whole on whose overall viability the individual habits depend. The consistent theoretical framework of enactivism sees cognition as “an embodied engagement in which the world is brought forth by the coherent activity of a cogniser in its environment” (Di Paolo, 2009a, p. 12).
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