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Index
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
1 Introduction: A Multidimensional Understanding of Acting Together
1.1 Doing Things Together
1.2 A Short Overview of the Collective Intentionality Debate
1.3 Dancing Together
1.4 Comparing Examples of Doing Things Together
1.5 Three Aspects of Joint Action
1.5.1 Control
1.5.2 Coordination
1.5.3 Jointness
1.6 Overview of the Chapters
2 The Automatic/Non-Automatic Divide
2.1 Dual-Process Theories
2.1.1 The Four Features of Automaticity
2.1.2 Theoretical Development and Gradual Distinctions
2.2 Separating Non-Automatic and Controlled
3 Control and Intentions in Individuals
3.1 Control and Mere Activity
3.1.1 Habitual and Skillful Actions
3.1.2 Mere Activity
3.2 Autonomous Agency and Self-Control
3.3 Diachronicity and Control
3.4 Synchronic and Diachronic Self-Control
4 Motor Control and Skillful Action
4.1 Motor Control
4.1.1 Hierarchical Division of Labor
4.1.2 Skill Acquisition
4.2 Skillful Action
4.2.1 Reasons for Less Automation – Stepping away from the Dichotomy
4.2.2 Three Levels of Control
4.3 Degrees of Freedom
4.3.1 Degrees of Freedom and Skill Acquisition
4.3.2 Degrees of Freedom in Joint Action
4.4 Conclusion
5 Planning Agency and Shared Agency
5.1 Introduction
A Route to Naturalizing Intentions
5.2 Planning Agency
5.2.1 The Methodology of Creature Construction
5.2.2 Eight Steps to Planning Agency – A Creature Construction
5.2.3 Creature Construction of Social and Shared Agency
5.3 Shared Agency
Functional Role
5.3.1 Sufficiency Conditions of Shared Cooperative Activity
5.3.2 I Intend That We J
5.3.3 Two Problems Concerning “I Intend That We J”
5.4 Diachronic and Synchronic Coherence
5.4.1 Synchronic Coherence and Guiding Desires
5.4.2 Coherence through Planning. Too Demanding?
5.5 Policies and Shared Policies
5.5.1 Policies in Planning Agency
5.5.2 Shared Policies
5.6 Cognitive Limitations and Purposive Agency
5.6.1 Bounded Rationality and Planning Agency
5.6.2 Purposive Shared Action
5.7 Control, Autonomy and Agentic Purpose
5.7.1 Agential Direction and Agential Control
5.7.2 Intend That and Intend To
5.8 Conclusion
6 Joint Action and Interaction
6.1 Emergent Coordination
6.1.1 Mechanisms of Emergent Coordination
6.1.2 Conclusion
6.2 Minimal Architecture Model of Joint Action
6.2.1 Four Modules for Joint Action
6.2.2 Conclusion
6.3 Enactivism, Joint Action, and Control
6.3.1 Autopoiesis
6.3.2 Autopoietic Interaction
6.3.3 An Enactive Approach to Dancing Together
6.3.4 Conclusion
6.4 A Sense of Control and a Sense of Agency in Joint Action
The Sense of Us
6.4.1 Phenomenological Exploration of the Sense of Us
6.4.2 The Psychology of the Sense of Agency and the Sense of Us
6.4.3 Conclusion
7 Skillful Joint Action
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Stepping Away from Binary Distinctions
7.2.1 The Orthodox Binary Distinction
Emergent Coordination
7.2.2 Mapping the Different Types of Coordination
7.3 Three Levels of Control and Coordination
7.3.1 Control
7.3.2 Three Levels of Coordination and Control
7.3.3 Expanding Beyond Fast-Paced Skillful Action: NDM and Heuristics
7.4 Diachronicity, Jointness and the Difference Between Parallel Action and Joint Action
7.4.1 Diachronicity
7.4.2 Jointness
7.4.3 Parallel Action and Joint Action
References
Subject Index
Index of Names
Notes
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