In this paper, we argue that radical embodied cognitive science implies an ethics of responsibility that prioritizes what
we refer to as taking collective responsibility. By taking responsibility, we mean that the ethical concept of responsibility
ought to be more fundamentally understood in terms of the knowledge-how of the first-person capacity to respond to a
situation rather than the knowledge-that of a third-person judgment that an agent ought to respond to a situation. By tak-
ing collecti…
Read moreIn this paper, we argue that radical embodied cognitive science implies an ethics of responsibility that prioritizes what
we refer to as taking collective responsibility. By taking responsibility, we mean that the ethical concept of responsibility
ought to be more fundamentally understood in terms of the knowledge-how of the first-person capacity to respond to a
situation rather than the knowledge-that of a third-person judgment that an agent ought to respond to a situation. By tak-
ing collective responsibility, we mean that all individual human response-taking (or, response-ability) is, to some extent, a
collective endeavor. Consequently, we argue that radical embodied cognitive science has a similarly radical consequence
for how we ought to think about the ethics of responsibility. To demonstrate, we consider social harms associated with
use of social media as a case study to demonstrate what we mean by taking collective responsibility. In short, identify-
ing who or what to hold responsible for social media harms obfuscates the more critical quest