distributive
vs
collective commitment (or intention)
vs
shared intention (or commitment)
Ayesha and Beatrice played the horse in our pantomime.
Case 1-individual: actors who perform a role distributively (different theatres, each
performs the role)
vs
Case 1-collective: actors who perform a role collectively (one plays the back of the
horse, the other plays the front of the horse)
Case 1-individual: actors who perform a role distributively (different theatres, each
performs the role)
vs
Case 1-shared: actors who share a role: one plays the character as a child,
the other plays the character as an adult. (Compare Bratman on shared intention:
Bratman)
Case 1-collective: actors who perform a role collectively (one plays the back of the
horse, the other plays the front of the horse)
vs
Case 1-shared: actors who share a role: one plays the character as a child,
the other plays the character as an adult.
Could give blame as a second example.
You have two minutes to think of another three-way contrast.
Think of Bratman on shared intention. According to Bratman, a shared intention
is something that we share in the same sense that Ayesha and Beatrice share the role
of pantomime horse when one plays the young horse and the other the old horse.
The shared intention comprises intentions and knowledge states some of which are mine
and some of which are yours.
By contrast, a collective commitment or intention would be one that we collectively have.
It’s analogous to the case where Ayesha and Beatrice join their bodies to play the horse.
(That is, we would be its plural subject.)