•  91
    We are agents, and what we do is live together. Living together is a joint activity. Joint activities involve shared intentions. Shared intentions have plural intentional subjects. Plural intentional subjects are plurally pre-reflectively self-aware. The social world of norms, statuses, roles, structures, and artifacts is our way of living together. It is up to us to live together in a way that suits our shared purpose of living well together. One precondition of becoming better at what we do is…Read more
  •  57
    We-Experience—With Walther
    with Xiaoxi Wu
    In Sebastian Luft & Ruth Hagengruber (eds.), Women Phenomenologists on Social Ontology: We-Experiences, Communal Life, and Joint Action, Springer Verlag. pp. 105-117. 2018.
    Shared beliefs, collective Emotionscollective and joint intentions are widely recognized to be at the core of the social world. Beliefs, emotions and intentions, however, largely depend on Experience. It is hard to see how the former could be joint, shared, or collective, without any possibility of togetherness at the experiential level. Sharing experiences is thus a key for human sociality.
  •  22
    An influential view argues that in order to act intentionally, the agent needs to know what he or she is doing. Such self-knowledge, it is claimed, is epistemically distinctive in that it is ‘groundless’—non-observational and non-inferential. This chapter investigates how this view relates to the theory of intentional joint action. Is our knowledge of what we are doing _together with others_—collectively, as a team or a group—of the same groundless kind? The chapter is divided in three sections.…Read more
  •  6
    Oxford Handbook of Social Ontology (edited book)
    Oxford University Press. forthcoming.
  •  24
    Gemeinsam in der Pflicht (review)
    Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 69 (6): 1086-1091. 2021.
  •  118
    The essays in this collection explore the idea that discursive norms--the norms governing our thought and talk--are profoundly social. Not only do these norms govern and structure of social interactions, but they are sustained by a variety of social and institutional structures. The chapters are divided into three thematic sections. The first offers historical perspectives on discursive norms, including a chapter by Robert Brandom on the way Hegel transformed Kant's normativist approach to repre…Read more
  •  42
    The book contains contributions by leading figures in philosophy of mind and action, emotion theory, and phenomenology. As the focus of the volume is truly innovative we expect the book to sell well to both philosophers and scholars from neighboring fields such as social and cognitive science. The predominant view in analytic philosophy is that an ability for self-evaluation is constitutive for agency and intentionality. Until now, the debate is limited in two (possibly mutually related) ways: F…Read more
  •  79
    Wir-Identität: reflexiv und vorreflexiv
    Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 53 (3). 2005.
  •  71
    This edited volume offers a new approach to understanding social conventions by way of Martin Heidegger. It connects the philosopher's conceptions of the anyone, everydayness, and authenticity with an analysis and critique of social normativity. Heidegger’s account of the anyone is ambiguous. Some see it as a good description of human sociality, others think of it as an important critique of modern mass society. This volume seeks to understand this ambiguity as reflecting the tension between the…Read more
  • Volksgeist”. Individuum und Kollektiv bei Moritz Lazarus (1824-1903)
    Dialektik: Zeitschrift für Kulturphilosophie 16 (1). 2005.
  •  87
    This edited volume examines the relationship between collective intentionality and inferential theories of meaning. The book consists of three main sections. The first part contains essays demonstrating how researchers working on inferentialism and collective intentionality can learn from one another. The essays in the second part examine the dimensions along which philosophical and empirical research on human reasoning and collective intentionality can benefit from more cross-pollination. T…Read more
  •  100
    The subject of “We intend”
    Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 17 (2): 231-243. 2018.
    This paper examines and compares the ways in which intentions of the singular kind and the plural kind are subjective. Are intentions of the plural kind ours in the same way intentions of the singular kind are mine? Starting with the singular case, it is argued that “I intend” is subjective in virtue of self-knowledge. Self-knowledge is special in that it is self-identifying, self-validating, self-committing, and self-authorizing. Moving to the plural form, it is argued that in spite of apparent…Read more
  •  29
    Vom Sprechen zum Hirn und zurück: Searle im Überblick
    Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 50 (3). 2002.
  •  1
    Wir-Intentionalität – Jenseits von Individualismus und Kollektivismus
    Dialektik: Zeitschrift für Kulturphilosophie 12. 2001.
  •  46
  •  24
    Social Reality – The Phenomenological Approach
    In Alessandro Salice & Hans Bernhard Schmid (eds.), The Phenomenological Approach to Social Reality: History, Concepts, Problems, Springer Verlag. pp. 1-14. 2016.
    Phenomenological investigations about social reality could be argued to center around three general concepts: Social and Institutional Facts, Collective Intentionality and Values. Even though it is certainly not possible to speak of one unified theory that phenomenology as such puts forward about social reality, the systematic interconnections between these concepts make the single contributions of phenomenologists tesserae of a larger mosaic. This introduction is an attempt to sketch this mosai…Read more
  •  101
    The Guise of the Bad in Augustine’s Pear Theft
    Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 21 (1): 71-89. 2018.
    In the second book of his Confessions, Augustine of Hippo presents his famous juvenile Pear Theft as an apparent case of acting under the guise of the bad. At least since Thomas Aquinas’ influential interpretation, scholars have usually taken Augustine’s detailed discussion of the case to be dispelling this “guise of the guise of the bad”, and to offer a solid “guise of the good”-explanation. This paper addresses an important challenge to this view: Augustine offers two different “guise of the g…Read more
  •  1
    Trust Beyond Belief
    In Michael Schmitz, Beatrice Kobow & Hans Bernhard Schmid (eds.), The Background of Social Reality: Selected Contributions from the Inaugural Meeting of ENSO, Springer. 2013.
  •  63
    Practical reasoning is an agent's capacity to determine her course of behavior on the base of some evaluation of available alternatives. Reasoning is instrumental insofar as an agent decides over available alternatives by aiming to choose the best means to realize her own goals. Reasoning is strategic if the agent assumes that what the best means to realize her own goals is depends on what other agents will do. Strategic reasoning still plays a central role in influential accounts of social acti…Read more
  •  40
    Dass Edmund Husserl am Problem der Intersubjektivität gescheitert ist, gilt als ausgemacht - und ebenso, welche Konsequenzen daraus zu ziehen sind. Entgegen dem allenthalben pauschal erklärten `Abschied vom Subjekt' spricht aber vieles dafür, dass es in der gegenwärtigen Sozialtheorie eher um eine Reformulierung transzendentaler Subjektivität geht. Diese Interpretationsthese wirft ein neues Licht auf den sozialtheoretischen Diskurs, der im deutschen Sprachraum in den vergangenen dreissig Jahren …Read more
  •  2
    The Feeling of Being a Group. Towards a Phenomenology of Corporate Emotions
    In Christian von Scheve & Mikko Salmela (eds.), Collective Emotions, Oxford University Press. 2014.
  •  27
    Table of Contents
    with Christoph Henning and Dieter Thomä
    In Dieter Thomä, Christoph Henning & Hans Bernhard Schmid (eds.), Social Capital, Social Identities: From Ownership to Belonging, De Gruyter. 2014.
  •  18
    In much of earlier philosophy of robotics and artificial intelligence, it is argued that while robots can perform fully standardized routine work, they are, as a matter of principle, unable to participate in the discursive practices within which our social form of life is negotiated. With robots (and their virtual counterparts, the bots) currently entering our service economy, it is not entirely unlikely to assume that this view is about to be disproven by the facts. It may well be that robots w…Read more