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From I-mode to We-mode: How is shared intentionality possible?| old_uid | 17375 |
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| title | From I-mode to We-mode: How is shared intentionality possible? |
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| start_date | 2019/02/06 |
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| schedule | 10h30-13h |
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| online | no |
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| location_info | salle D2 018 |
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| summary | When human beings engage in joint actions, they need to know what others have in mind in order to collaborate. On the basis of insights about this capacity of individual people to share mental contents some philosophers and scientists of social cognition, notably John Searle and Micheal Tomasello, have argued for the importance of shared intentionality in social interaction. In addition, their idea of a specific we-mode of shared intentionality points out the importance of a plurality of I-mode perspectives for sharing intentionality. Focusing on the highly specialized field of elite sports dance, this talk will offer on the one hand a naturalistic argument for the irreducibility of this we-mode of shared intentionality. On the other hand, it will also explore the way in which a joint project, considered as a particular kind of joint action, is responsible for the structural scaffolding of human relationships and how movement, affection and practice should unfold in such a type of joint action. It will thereby also be shown that, by attributing goal, meaning and value, joint projects (and social institutions more generally) play constitutive roles in the creation and practice of shared intentionality. |
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| responsibles | Roy |
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