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23Verzeichnis der Autorinnen und Autoren/List of AuthorsIn Frank Hofmann (ed.), Rationalität, Realismus, Revision / Rationality, Realism, Revision: Vorträge des 3. internationalen Kongresses der Gesellschaft für Analytische Philosophie vom 15. bis zum 18. September 1997 in München / Proceedings of the 3rd international Congress of the Society for Analytical Philosophy September 15-18, 1997 in Munich, De Gruyter. pp. 873-878. 2000.
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35How to be a Good Non-Naturalist: Epistemology as Rational Reconstruction in Carnap and his PredecessorsIn Frank Hofmann (ed.), Rationalität, Realismus, Revision / Rationality, Realism, Revision: Vorträge des 3. internationalen Kongresses der Gesellschaft für Analytische Philosophie vom 15. bis zum 18. September 1997 in München / Proceedings of the 3rd international Congress of the Society for Analytical Philosophy September 15-18, 1997 in Munich, De Gruyter. pp. 856-861. 2000.
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6Collective Goals AnalyzedIn Gerhard Preyer, Frank Hindriks & Sara Rachel Chant (eds.), From Individual to Collective Intentionality: New Essays, Oxford University Press. pp. 34-60. 2014.This chapter presents an analysis of collective goals that extends the ideas that Tuomela in particular has developed over the past three decades. The chapter is concerned with understanding the apparent variety of collective goals and set out to explicate what makes a goal collective. The chapter argues that collective goals are collectively accepted and that a collective goal is such that it is satisfied for one member of a collective only if it is satisfied for all. The chapter argues that co…Read more
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10Motivating Reasons for ActionIn Mark Timmons, John Greco & Alfred R. Mele (eds.), Rationality and the Good: Critical Essays on the Ethics and Epistemology of Robert Audi, Oxford University Press. pp. 176-198. 2007.This chapter presents an account of motivational reasons that agents have for acting. This account covers not only the case of single‐agent action and reasons for them, but also the case of social reasons for action. In the course of presenting his account, this chapter relates it to Audi's theory of reasons. As it explains, this account is largely compatible with Audi's, but there remain theoretical differences. For instance, the view put forward here is more externalist than Audi's and does no…Read more
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3Collective Goals and Communicative ActionIn Raimo Tuomela, Raul Hakli & Pekka Mäkelä (eds.), Social Ontology in the Making, De Gruyter. pp. 173-212. 2020.This paper gives an account of communicative action from the point of view of communication as a cooperative enterprise. It is argued that this is communication both on the basis of shared collective goals and without them. It is also argued that people can communicate without specifically formed illocutionary communicative intentions. The paper concludes by comparing the account given in the paper with Habermas’s theory of communicative action.
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8We Will Do ItIn Raimo Tuomela, Raul Hakli & Pekka Mäkelä (eds.), Social Ontology in the Making, De Gruyter. pp. 113-140. 2020.This paper investigates the truth conditions of intention expressions of the kind “We will do X,” taking group-intentions to be exactly those entities of which such expressions are true in the case of single members of a group. The basic philosophical motivation for this study is in part the argued importance of the notion of we-intention and, in addition, the idea that we can plausibly attribute to group-members intentions which are not directly action-prompting. The paper presents and argues f…Read more
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7Actions by CollectivesIn Raimo Tuomela, Raul Hakli & Pekka Mäkelä (eds.), Social Ontology in the Making, De Gruyter. pp. 89-112. 2020.This article investigates some central philosophical problems related to actions performed by collectives with the focus on studying under what conditions attributions of actions to collectives can correctly be made. We commonly attribute actions to collectives, and hence it seems to be a worthwhile project to accept such a commonsensical view at least in part and to think that true statements attributing actions to collectives can be made. This view does not by itself entail that such attributi…Read more
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17The Philosophy of Sociality: The Shared Point of ViewOUP Usa. 2007.Concepts based on full-blown collective intentionality (aboutness) are central for understanding the social world. The book systematically studies social groups, collective commitment, group intentions, beliefs, and actions, especially authority-based group attitudes and actions, also addressing cooperation, cultural evolution, and responsibility.
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14Collective Intentionality and Group ReasonsIn Hans Bernhard Schmid, Katinka Schulte-Ostermann & Nikos Psarros (eds.), Concepts of Sharedness: Essays on Collective Intentionality, De Gruyter. pp. 3-20. 2008.
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16PrefaceIn Georg Meggle & Julian Nida-Rümelin (eds.), Analyomen 2, Vol 3: Philosophy of Mind, Practical Philosophy, Miscellanea, De Gruyter. 1997.
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16Gemeinsame AbsichtenIn Georg Meggle & Julian Nida-Rümelin (eds.), Analyomen 2, Vol 3: Philosophy of Mind, Practical Philosophy, Miscellanea, De Gruyter. pp. 171-178. 1997.
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6ContentIn Hans Bernhard Schmid, Daniel Sirtes & Marcel Weber (eds.), Collective Epistemology, Ontos. 2011.
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8Private Versus Collective AttitudesIn Martin Rechenauer (ed.), Rationalität, Realismus, Revision / Rationality, Realism, Revision: Vorträge des 3. internationalen Kongresses der Gesellschaft für Analytische Philosophie vom 15. bis zum 18. September 1997 in München / Proceedings of the 3rd international Congress of the Society for Analytical Philosophy September 15-18, 1997 in Munich, De Gruyter. pp. 317-321. 2000.
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11List of PublicationsIn Raimo Tuomela, Raul Hakli & Pekka Mäkelä (eds.), Social Ontology in the Making, De Gruyter. pp. 381-382. 2020.
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10Group Agents and Their ResponsibilityIn Raimo Tuomela, Raul Hakli & Pekka Mäkelä (eds.), Social Ontology in the Making, De Gruyter. pp. 359-380. 2020.Group agents are able to act but are not literally agents. Some group agents, e. g., we-mode groups and corporations, can, however, be regarded as functional group agents that do not have “intrinsic” mental states and phenomenal features comparable to what their individual members on biological and psychological grounds have. But they can have “extrinsic” mental states, states collectively attributed to them - primarily by their members. In this paper, we discuss the responsibility of such group…Read more
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10Collective Intentions and the Maintenance of Social PracticesIn Raimo Tuomela, Raul Hakli & Pekka Mäkelä (eds.), Social Ontology in the Making, De Gruyter. pp. 293-326. 2020.This paper studies social practices and the dynamics of their maintenance in precise mathematical and logical terms. Roughly, social practices (such as shaking hands, going regularly to sauna, eating a certain kind of food at Easter, etc.) are recurrent collective activities based on collective attitudes (“shared we-attitudes”), and the central kind of social practice under study here, is one based on collective intention. Social practices are the building blocks of human societies, and also of …Read more
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11Norms and AgreementIn Raimo Tuomela, Raul Hakli & Pekka Mäkelä (eds.), Social Ontology in the Making, De Gruyter. pp. 283-292. 2020.Social norms can be divided into social rules (“r-norms”) based on relevant authoritative agreement-making and proper social norms (“s-norms”) which may exist even unverbalized and are based on the mutual beliefs of the members of the social collective in which they are in force. The paper argues for the following two-fold thesis: a) r-norms override s-norms in a sense of having more “agreement-based” objective social obligating power than the latter, but b) which one or ones of these kinds of s…Read more
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6Group BeliefsIn Raimo Tuomela, Raul Hakli & Pekka Mäkelä (eds.), Social Ontology in the Making, De Gruyter. pp. 141-172. 2020.It is argued in this paper that there can be both ‘normative’ and ‘nonnormative’, merely factual group beliefs. The former involve the whole social group in question, while the latter only relate to the distributions of personal beliefs within the group. The paper develops a detailed theory, called the positional account of group beliefs, to explicate normative, group-involving group beliefs. Normative group beliefs are characterized within this approach in terms of joint acceptances of views by…Read more
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13Social Ontology in the Making: An IntroductionIn Raimo Tuomela, Raul Hakli & Pekka Mäkelä (eds.), Social Ontology in the Making, De Gruyter. pp. 1-16. 2020.
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9From Social Imitation to TeamworkIn Raimo Tuomela, Raul Hakli & Pekka Mäkelä (eds.), Social Ontology in the Making, De Gruyter. pp. 17-68. 2020.Our common-sense framework uses a great variety of social and collective notions related to action. Thus some persons can be said to perform joint actions, act together, act in concert, act collectively in pursuit of a goal, cooperate, struggle against each other, and so on. This article investigates variable forms of social action in order to create a classification of various kinds of social and collective action that would be useful for social-scientific purposes and for further philosophical…Read more
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3Table of ContentsIn Raimo Tuomela, Raul Hakli & Pekka Mäkelä (eds.), Social Ontology in the Making, De Gruyter. 2020.
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5Cooperation and Trust in Group ContextIn Raimo Tuomela, Raul Hakli & Pekka Mäkelä (eds.), Social Ontology in the Making, De Gruyter. pp. 213-254. 2020.This paper is mainly about cooperation as a collective action in a group context (acting in a position or participating in the performance of a group task, etc.), although the assumption of the presence of a group context is not made in all parts of the paper. The paper clarifies what acting as a group member involves, and it analytically characterizes the “we-mode” (thinking and acting as a group member) and the “I-mode” (thinking and acting as a private person). The main task of the paper is t…Read more
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71Social Ontology in the Making (edited book)De Gruyter. 2020.The book includes both essential classics and buried treasures that have not yet received the attention they deserve.The papers of the collection cover a time span of 30 years and thanks to that the collection provides a historical perspective into the development of the field, and into the development of one of the main positions in particular. The collection also provides insights that are still viable and worthy of further scrutiny and development, and in virtue of this the collection functio…Read more
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11Joint Action and Group Action Made PreciseIn Raimo Tuomela, Raul Hakli & Pekka Mäkelä (eds.), Social Ontology in the Making, De Gruyter. pp. 255-282. 2020.The paper argues that there are two main kinds of joint action, direct joint bringing about (or performing) something (expressed in terms of a DO-operator) and jointly seeing to it that something is the case (expressed in terms of a Stit-operator). The former kind of joint action contains conjunctive, disjunctive and sequential action and its central subkinds. While joint seeing to it that something is the case is argued to be necessarily intentional, direct joint performance can also be noninte…Read more
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5FrontmatterIn Raimo Tuomela, Raul Hakli & Pekka Mäkelä (eds.), Social Ontology in the Making, De Gruyter. 2020.
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24We-IntentionsIn Raimo Tuomela, Raul Hakli & Pekka Mäkelä (eds.), Social Ontology in the Making, De Gruyter. pp. 69-88. 2020.Paradigmatically, a we-intention is a participatory intention of a group member to do her part of a joint action, together with the other members, while believing that there is a mutual belief (awareness, understanding) concerning this action. She takes her contribution as a means for satisfying the group’s end. When she intends to perform her share as her part of the joint action, she intends to perform her part and believes that the others will do theirs in circumstances of mutual awareness. S…Read more
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5Two Kinds of We-ReasoningIn Raimo Tuomela, Raul Hakli & Pekka Mäkelä (eds.), Social Ontology in the Making, De Gruyter. pp. 327-358. 2020.People sometimes think in terms of ‘we’ referring to a group they belong to. When making decisions, they frame the decision problem as: ‘What should we do?’ instead of ‘What should I do?’.We study one particular approach to such ‘we-reasoning’, economist Michael Bacharach’s theory of ‘team reasoning’, and relate it to philosopher Raimo Tuomela’s distinction between ‘Imode’ reasoning and ‘we-mode’ reasoning.We argue that these theories complement each other: Tuomela’s philosophical theory provide…Read more
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10Subject indexIn Raimo Tuomela, Raul Hakli & Pekka Mäkelä (eds.), Social Ontology in the Making, De Gruyter. pp. 383-388. 2020.
Raimo Tuomela
(1940 - 2020)
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University of HelsinkiDepartment of Philosophy (Theoretical Philosophy, Practical Philosophy, Philosophy in Swedish)Retired faculty