This paper critically examines Sara Rachel Chant’s attempt to extend the category of collective action to include unintentional collective actions and, on that basis, to provide a unified account of individual and collective action. While Chant’s proposal is motivated by a plausible criticism of classical theories that focus narrowly on small-scale, fully cooperative cases, we argue that her account cannot achieve both of its central aims simultaneously. We introduce a novel case, The Wicked and…
Read moreThis paper critically examines Sara Rachel Chant’s attempt to extend the category of collective action to include unintentional collective actions and, on that basis, to provide a unified account of individual and collective action. While Chant’s proposal is motivated by a plausible criticism of classical theories that focus narrowly on small-scale, fully cooperative cases, we argue that her account cannot achieve both of its central aims simultaneously. We introduce a novel case, The Wicked and The Innocent, in which one agent intentionally uses another agent as a means. According to Chant’s criteria, this case qualifies as a collective action. We argue that such cases generate a dilemma for Chant’s view: either they undermine her account as counterexamples, or they force a disanalogy between individual and collective action. We conclude that the category of collective action cannot be broadened in the way Chant proposes.