Abstract
In the wake of the recent impressive resurgence of interest in the notion of habits among philosophers, social scientists, psychologists and neuroscientists, this article examines the relevance of human habits to the current environmental crisis. The recently established, multidisciplinary matrix known as ‘Environmental Humanities’ has put major emphasis on habits and their role in, on the one hand, compounding the current ecological disaster (it is the case of those ‘environmentally damaging habits’ such as using too many plastic bags or using plastic straws) but also, on the other hand, in potentially providing a way out of the crisis. Indeed, new ways of behaving that are less harmful to the environment, can only be formed in a way that is robust enough to endure if they are produced through embodied processes of consolidation, i.e. if they become seated in the form of habits.