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- Q5146162 subject Q6979877.
- Q5146162 subject Q7145043.
- Q5146162 subject Q7494754.
- Q5146162 abstract "In the philosophy of mind, collective intentionality characterizes the intentionality that occurs when two or more individuals undertake a task together. Examples include two individuals carrying a heavy table up a flight of stairs or dancing a tango.This phenomenon is approached from psychological and normative perspectives, among others. Prominent philosophers working in the psychological manner are Raimo Tuomela, Kaarlo Miller, John R. Searle, and Michael E. Bratman. Margaret Gilbert takes a normative approach dealing specifically with group formation. David Velleman is also concerned with how groups are formed, but his account lacks the normative element present in Gilbert.The notion that collectives are capable of forming intentions can be found, whether implicitly or explicitly, in literature going back thousands of years. For example, ancient texts such as Plato's Republic discuss the cooperative determination of laws and social order by the group composed of society as a whole. This theme was later expanded into Social Contract theory by Enlightenment-era philosophers such as Thomas Hobbes and John Locke. In the 20th century, the likes of Wilfrid Sellars and Anthony Quinton noted the existence of "We-Intentions" amid broader discussion of the concept of intentionality, and thus laid the groundwork for the focused philosophical analysis of collective intentionality that began in the late 1980s.".
- Q5146162 thumbnail SDMB_Pitchfork_Drill_Formation.jpg?width=300.
- Q5146162 wikiPageExternalLink BecchioConCog04.pdf.
- Q5146162 wikiPageExternalLink Project_Description.pdf.
- Q5146162 wikiPageExternalLink summary?doi=10.1.1.81.7868.
- Q5146162 wikiPageExternalLink collective-responsibility.
- Q5146162 wikiPageExternalLink game-theory.
- Q5146162 wikiPageExternalLink shared-agency.
- Q5146162 wikiPageExternalLink Shared_intentionality_07.pdf.
- Q5146162 wikiPageExternalLink coll-int.
- Q5146162 wikiPageExternalLink collecti.
- Q5146162 wikiPageExternalLink CIBSS-Nous.pdf.
- Q5146162 wikiPageExternalLink FSR.pdf.
- Q5146162 wikiPageExternalLink The%20Argument%20from%20Normativity%20Autonomy%20for%20Collective%20Agents.pdf.
- Q5146162 wikiPageExternalLink 3487965.
- Q5146162 wikiPageExternalLink 40212163.
- Q5146162 wikiPageExternalLink Pacheco-Carmo-2001-Roles.pdf.
- Q5146162 wikiPageExternalLink lighthouse8.htm.
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- Q5146162 comment "In the philosophy of mind, collective intentionality characterizes the intentionality that occurs when two or more individuals undertake a task together. Examples include two individuals carrying a heavy table up a flight of stairs or dancing a tango.This phenomenon is approached from psychological and normative perspectives, among others. Prominent philosophers working in the psychological manner are Raimo Tuomela, Kaarlo Miller, John R. Searle, and Michael E. Bratman.".
- Q5146162 label "Collective intentionality".
- Q5146162 depiction SDMB_Pitchfork_Drill_Formation.jpg.