The collective fallacy: the possibility of irreducibly collective action without corresponding collective moral responsibility

Hedahl, M. (2013). The collective fallacy: the possibility of irreducibly collective action without corresponding collective moral responsibility. Philosophy of the Social Sciences, 43(3), 283-300. https://doi.org/10.1177/0048393113489266
Copy

The common assumption is that if a group comprising moral agents can act intentionally, as a group, then the group itself can also be properly regarded as a moral agent with respect to that action. I argue, however, that this common assumption is the result of a problematic line of reasoning I refer to as "the collective fallacy." Recognizing the collective fallacy as a fallacy allows us to see that if there are, in fact, irreducibly joint actors, then some of them will lack the full-fledged moral agency of their members. The descriptivist question of whether a group can perform irreducibly joint intentional action need not rise and fall with the normative question of whether a group can be a moral agent.

Full text not available from this repository.

Export as

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core JSON Multiline CSV
Export