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Sense of agency in joint action: a critical review of we-agency

Alexis Le Besnerais, James W. Moore, Bruno Berberian, Ouriel Grynszpan

2024Frontiers in Psychology13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The sense of agency refers to the experience of control over voluntary actions and their effects. There is growing interest in the notion of we-agency, whereby individual sense of agency is supplanted by a collective agentic experience. The existence of this unique agentic state would have profound implications for human responsibility, and, as such, warrants further scrutiny. In this paper, we review the concept of we-agency and examine whether evidence supports it. We argue that this concept entails multiplying hypothetical agentic states associated with joint action, thus ending up with an entangled phenomenology that appears somewhat speculative when weighted against the available evidence. In light of this, we suggest that the concept of we-agency should be abandoned in favor of a more parsimonious framework for the sense of agency in joint action.

Topics & Concepts

Agency (philosophy)Sense of agencyScrutinyAction (physics)PsychologyEpistemologyPhenomenology (philosophy)Social psychologyPolitical scienceLawPhilosophyQuantum mechanicsPhysicsFree Will and AgencyPsychology of Moral and Emotional JudgmentPsychosomatic Disorders and Their Treatments