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Defining Joint Action Defining Joint Action
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Philosophical Accounts of Joint Action Philosophical Accounts of Joint Action
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Shared Task Representations Shared Task Representations
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Embedded, Embodied, and Enactive Approaches to Joint Action Embedded, Embodied, and Enactive Approaches to Joint Action
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Joint Action and Extended Mind Joint Action and Extended Mind
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Joint Action and Development Joint Action and Development
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Moving Forward: An Ecumenical Approach Moving Forward: An Ecumenical Approach
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References References
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13 Joint Action and 4E Cognition
Get accessTorstein Theodor Tollefsen is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Oslo. He works mainly on metaphysical topics in pagan and Christian thought in late antiquity.
Rick Dale, University of California, Los Angeles, USA
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Published:09 October 2018
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Abstract
Over past thirty years there has been an increased interest in studying joint action across a number of different disciplines including psychology, sociology, cognitive anthropology, cognitive science, and philosophy. In this chapter we canvas recent philosophical and empirical research on joint action. Along the way we highlight embedded, embodied, extended, and enactive approaches and the challenges they pose for more orthodox approaches to joint action. We propose an ecumenical approach to the study of joint action. The cognitive science of joint action will have to integrate both high-level and low-level approaches across a variety of disciplines, including experimental psychology, neuroscience, and philosophy. A single unitary account is unlikely to capture the nuanced and complex nature of joint action. Instead, we argue that we should seek a better understanding of how various accounts coalesce into a tapestry of explanatory tools.
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