Reasons, Coherence, and Group Rationality
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Open Access
Type
PreprintAuthor/s
Hedden, BrianAbstract
If groups can have beliefs and other attitudes of their own, what determines which such attitudes the group rationally ought to have? A widespread presupposition is that group-level beliefs should be a function of the beliefs of the group’s members, and similarly for other attitudes. ...
See moreIf groups can have beliefs and other attitudes of their own, what determines which such attitudes the group rationally ought to have? A widespread presupposition is that group-level beliefs should be a function of the beliefs of the group’s members, and similarly for other attitudes. But a host of impossibility theorems show that no such aggregation function can satisfy intuitively attractive constraints while ensuring coherent group-level attitudes. I argue that this presupposition is false. Group-level attitudes should be a function of group-level reasons (evidence, in the epistemic case), not individual-level attitudes. This allows for a theory of group rationality that (i) bypasses a host of pessimistic results in the literature on judgment aggregation and (ii) treats rational individual-level attitudes and rational group-level attitudes in parallel.
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See moreIf groups can have beliefs and other attitudes of their own, what determines which such attitudes the group rationally ought to have? A widespread presupposition is that group-level beliefs should be a function of the beliefs of the group’s members, and similarly for other attitudes. But a host of impossibility theorems show that no such aggregation function can satisfy intuitively attractive constraints while ensuring coherent group-level attitudes. I argue that this presupposition is false. Group-level attitudes should be a function of group-level reasons (evidence, in the epistemic case), not individual-level attitudes. This allows for a theory of group rationality that (i) bypasses a host of pessimistic results in the literature on judgment aggregation and (ii) treats rational individual-level attitudes and rational group-level attitudes in parallel.
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Date
2019Publisher
WileyLicence
OtherRights statement
"This is the pre-peer reviewed version of the following article: Hedden, B. (2019), Reasons, Coherence, and Group Rationality. Philos Phenomenol Res, 99: 581-604, which has been published in final form at https://doi.org/10.1111/phpr.12486. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Use of Self-Archived Versions."Faculty/School
Faculty of Arts and Social SciencesDepartment, Discipline or Centre
PhilosophyShare