Event Detail
Thu Nov 7, 2024 301 Philosophy Hall 12–1 PM |
Work in Progress Talk Carolyn Dicey Jennings (University of California, Merced) Work In Progress Talk: Collective Attention |
Abstract: I have argued in several places for an emergence-based view of mental control (see, e.g., Jennings 2022). In such an account we exhibit mental control through the control of parts of ourselves by the whole. In attention, for example, the collection of all of our interests determines which of two competing interests gets prioritized. A nice thing about this account is how easily it can scale up to the social level. We might call emergent attention at the social level “collective attention.” The collection of interests shared by a group of people would, in this case, jointly determine which of the competing group interests finds expression. This might, for example, help us to make sense of how groups decide between alternative possibilities, as discussed by List (2023). As this approach depends on the structure of relations between the parts, it does not assume the existence of collective experience, distinguishing it from most other accounts of collective cognition (e.g. Seemann 2009). In this work-in-progress talk I will discuss some evidence for collective attention and how it intersects with recent digital technologies.