Collective beliefs and horizontal interactions between groups: the case of political parties

Groups matter in our ordinary folk psychology because a part of our social interactions is done with collective entities. In our everyday life, we indeed sometimes ascribe mental states to social groups as a whole or to individuals as members of groups in order to understand and p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Olivier Ouzilou
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Rosetti Internaţional 2015-05-01
Series:Journal of Philosophical Economics
Subjects:
Online Access: http://jpe.ro/pdf.php?id=7112
id doaj-a28b5c19508f4492b66b45619323f7d7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a28b5c19508f4492b66b45619323f7d72020-11-25T00:37:39ZdeuRosetti InternaţionalJournal of Philosophical Economics1843-22981844-82082015-05-01VIII2721Collective beliefs and horizontal interactions between groups: the case of political partiesOlivier Ouzilou0 University of Lorraine Groups matter in our ordinary folk psychology because a part of our social interactions is done with collective entities. In our everyday life, we indeed sometimes ascribe mental states to social groups as a whole or to individuals as members of groups in order to understand and predict their behavior. The aim of this paper is to explore this aspect of social interactions by focusing on the concept of ‘collective belief’ in a non- summative sense and, more precisely, on collective belief of a specific kind of group: the political party. How can the concept of ‘collective belief’ help to understand the interactions which involve these kinds of collective entities? After providing an epistemic description of political parties, this paper focuses on the collective belief in a non-summative sense. As Gilbert says, a group believes that p, if its members are jointly committed to believe that p as a body. It is argued, with the help of an example from the political history of France, that this view can enable us to understand the interaction between political parties. More precisely, it can help clarify the way in which a political party uses the rational constraints on the party as a whole and/or the social and epistemic constraints on the behavior of the group's members in order to destabilize or weaken other political parties. http://jpe.ro/pdf.php?id=7112 collective beliefsepistemic rationalitygroupsideological commitmentpolitical partysocial interactionstransversal themes
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Olivier Ouzilou
spellingShingle Olivier Ouzilou
Collective beliefs and horizontal interactions between groups: the case of political parties
Journal of Philosophical Economics
collective beliefs
epistemic rationality
groups
ideological commitment
political party
social interactions
transversal themes
author_facet Olivier Ouzilou
author_sort Olivier Ouzilou
title Collective beliefs and horizontal interactions between groups: the case of political parties
title_short Collective beliefs and horizontal interactions between groups: the case of political parties
title_full Collective beliefs and horizontal interactions between groups: the case of political parties
title_fullStr Collective beliefs and horizontal interactions between groups: the case of political parties
title_full_unstemmed Collective beliefs and horizontal interactions between groups: the case of political parties
title_sort collective beliefs and horizontal interactions between groups: the case of political parties
publisher Rosetti Internaţional
series Journal of Philosophical Economics
issn 1843-2298
1844-8208
publishDate 2015-05-01
description Groups matter in our ordinary folk psychology because a part of our social interactions is done with collective entities. In our everyday life, we indeed sometimes ascribe mental states to social groups as a whole or to individuals as members of groups in order to understand and predict their behavior. The aim of this paper is to explore this aspect of social interactions by focusing on the concept of ‘collective belief’ in a non- summative sense and, more precisely, on collective belief of a specific kind of group: the political party. How can the concept of ‘collective belief’ help to understand the interactions which involve these kinds of collective entities? After providing an epistemic description of political parties, this paper focuses on the collective belief in a non-summative sense. As Gilbert says, a group believes that p, if its members are jointly committed to believe that p as a body. It is argued, with the help of an example from the political history of France, that this view can enable us to understand the interaction between political parties. More precisely, it can help clarify the way in which a political party uses the rational constraints on the party as a whole and/or the social and epistemic constraints on the behavior of the group's members in order to destabilize or weaken other political parties.
topic collective beliefs
epistemic rationality
groups
ideological commitment
political party
social interactions
transversal themes
url http://jpe.ro/pdf.php?id=7112
work_keys_str_mv AT olivierouzilou collectivebeliefsandhorizontalinteractionsbetweengroupsthecaseofpoliticalparties
_version_ 1725300160256278528