Collective intentionality by individual action
I have written a new article on collective
intentionality, a theme that gets increasing attention in the philosophy of
action. Below you find a summary of the text. Interested to read it? Then you
find the full text here on my website: http://www.bijdeweg.nl/The%20possibility%20of%20group%20intentions.pdf
The article can alos be found on the website of www.academia.edu.
Abstract of “Collective Intentionality and
Individual Action”
People often do things together and form groups in order to get things
done that they cannot do alone. In short they form a collectivity of some kind
or a group, for short. But if we consider a group on the one hand and the
persons that constitute the group on the other hand, how does it happen that
these persons work together and finish a common task with a common goal? In the
philosophy of action this problem is often solved by saying that there is a
kind of collective intention that the group members have in mind and that
guides their actions. Does such a collective intention really exist? In this article
I’ll show that the answer is “no”. In order to substantiate my view I’ll
discuss the approaches of Bratman, Gilbert and Searle on collective intention.
I’ll put forward four kinds of criticism that undermine the idea of collective
intention. They apply mainly to Bratman and Gilbert. First, it is basically
difficult to mark off smaller groups from bigger unities. Second, most groups
change in membership composition over time. Third, as a rule, on the one hand
groups are internally structured and on the other hand they belong to a larger
structure. It makes that generally it cannot be a collective intention that
moves the actions of the members of a group. Fourth, conversely, most
individual actions cannot be performed without the existence of a wider context
of agents who support these actions and make them possible.
My critique on Searle mainly involves that in his approach his idea of
collective intention is superfluous and that he is not radical enough in his
idea that collective action is based on coordinated individual intentions and actions.
However, it is a good starting point for showing how collective action actually
functions, especially when combined with Giddens’s structuration theory. Every
agent in a group executes his or her own individual intentions, relying on what
the group offers to this agent and asks from him or her. In this way individual
actions of the members of a group are coordinated and it makes that the group
can function and that its goals can be performed. And in this way the group is
produced and reproduced by fitting individual actions together. An individual
agent who belongs to a group only needs to know what s/he wants and what s/he
has to do in the group, even if s/he has no knowledge of the intentions and
commitments of the other members. Then he or she can do things together with
others in a group without supposing that there is something like a collective
intention.
Keywords:
collective intention, collective intentionality, collective action,
we-intention, shared agency, shared action, joint action, joint commitment,
joint intention, group intention, individual action, action, structuration,
structuration theory, Bratman, Gilbert, Searle, Giddens.
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