This book reports on cutting-edge research concerning social practices. Merging perspectives from various disciplines, including philosophy, biology, and cognitive science, it discusses theoretical aspects of social behavior along with models to investigate them, and also presents key case studies. Further, It describes concepts related to habits, routines, and rituals and examines important features of human action, such as intentionality and choice, exploring the influence of specific social practices in different situations. Based on a workshop held in June 2018 at the 6th World Congress of Universal Logic, UNILOG2018, in Vichy, and including additional invited chapters, the book offers fresh insights into the fields of social practice and the cognitive, computational, and philosophical tools to understand them.
Cuprins
Chapter 1: Collective Phronesis? An Investigation of Collective Judgment and Professional Action.- Chapter 2: Joint and Individual Intentionality: A genetic, Phenomenological Approach.- Chapter 3: From Seattle’s Speech Acts to Smith’s Truth Makers.- Chapter 4: The Biological Logic of Human Action:on the (Considerable) Difference between “Rational” and “Adaptive”.- Chapter 5: Moral Bubbles Effect.- Chapter 6: A Computable Model of Amartya Sen’s Social Choice Function in the Framework of Category Theory Logic.