Abstract
Olle Blomberg challenges three claims in my book From Individual to
Plural Agency (Ludwig, Kirk (2016): From Individual to Plural Agency: Collective
Action 1. Vols. 2. Oxford: Oxford University Press.). The first is that there are no
collective actions in the sense in which there are individual actions. The second
is that singular action sentences entail that there is no more than one agent of
the event expressed by the action verb in the way required by that verb (the sole
agency requirement). The third, is that an individual intention, e.g. to build a boat,
is not satisfied if you don’t do it yourself. On the first point, I grant that Blomberg
identifies an important distinction between simple and composite actions the
book did not take into account, but argue it doesn’t show that there are collective
actions in the same sense there are individual actions. On the second point, I
argue from examples that the collective reading of plural action sentences doesn’t
entail the distributive reading, which requires the sole agency requirement on
singular action sentences. This settles the third point, since it entails that if you
intend to build a boat, you are successful only if you are the only agent of it in the
sense required by the verb.