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Making our ends meet: Shared intention, goal adoption and the third-person perspective

Academic Article
Publication Date:
2014
abstract:
Mind reading (i.e. the ability to infer the mental state of another agent) is taken to be the main cognitive ability required to share an intention and to collaborate. In this paper, I argue that another cognitive ability is also necessary to collaborate: representing others' and ones' own goals from a third-person perspective (other-centred or allocentric representation of goals). I argue that allocentric mind reading enables the cognitive ability of goal adoption, i.e. having the goal that another agent's achieve p because and as long as another agent has that goal that p. Having clarified the relevance of mutual goal adoption for acting jointly, I argue that when an intention is shared between several agents, each individual has an intention in favour of the joint action and one in favour of a joint mode of reasoning. This mode of reasoning is allocentric reasoning. Finally, I elaborate on the consequences of this view for the scientific study of human collaboration. © 2013 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Allocentric representations; Collaboration; Goal adoption; Shared intention; Social cognition; Third-person perspective
List of contributors:
Tummolini, Luca
Authors of the University:
TUMMOLINI LUCA
Handle:
https://iris.cnr.it/handle/20.500.14243/274234
Published in:
PHENOMENOLOGY AND THE COGNITIVE SCIENCES
Journal
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http://www.scopus.com/record/display.url?eid=2-s2.0-84896405148&origin=inward
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