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Publication details

Year: 2007

Pages: 141-159

Series: Synthese

Full citation:

Nicholas Bardsley, "On collective intentions", Synthese 157 (2), 2007, pp. 141-159.

On collective intentions

collective action in economics and philosophy

Nicholas Bardsley

pp. 141-159

in: Knowledge, rationality & action, Synthese 157 (2), 2007.

Abstract

Philosophers and economists write about collective action from distinct but related points of view. This paper aims to bridge these perspectives. Economists have been concerned with rationality in a strategic context. There, problems posed by “coordination games” seem to point to a form of rational action, “team thinking,” which is not individualistic. Philosophers’ analyses of collective intention, however, sometimes reduce collective action to a set of individually instrumental actions. They do not, therefore, capture the first person plural perspective characteristic of team thinking. Other analyses, problematically, depict intentions ranging over others’ actions. I offer an analysis of collective intention which avoids these problems. A collective intention aims only at causing an individual action, but its propositional content stipulates its mirroring in other minds.

Publication details

Year: 2007

Pages: 141-159

Series: Synthese

Full citation:

Nicholas Bardsley, "On collective intentions", Synthese 157 (2), 2007, pp. 141-159.