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Joint Ability and 'Ought' Implies 'Can' for Pluralities of Agents
Book chapter

Joint Ability and 'Ought' Implies 'Can' for Pluralities of Agents

Anne Schwenkenbecher
Getting Our Act Together, pp.37-62
Routledge Studies in Ethics and Moral Theory, Routledge, 1st
2021

Abstract

Arts & Humanities Ethics Philosophy Social Sciences Social Sciences - Other Topics
When do agents in loose, unstructured groups have the joint ability that a collective obligation implies? Two agents a and b have joint ability to do x if a has individual ability to do xa and b has individual ability to do xb , where xa and xb produce x, both actions are compossible, and a and b are in principle capable of intentionally combining them. Importantly, joint ability is not the same as the ability to perform a joint action in the strict sense. Joint ability is scalar, and a plurality’s joint ability may be insufficient for grounding a specific collective obligation where the likelihood that the agents jointly produce x is very low.

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