The Faculty of Philosophy, University of Cambridge, in conjunction with
Routledge present the eighth annual Routledge Lecture in Philosophy:

'Acting and Thinking Together'

Given by Professor Michael Bratman (Stanford University) on Thursday 12 June
at 5.30pm in the Lecture Theatre, Trinity Hall, Cambridge.

Abstract:
Human beings act together in characteristic ways, and these forms of shared
intentional and shared cooperative activity matter to us a great deal. Think
of friendship, singing duets, and the joys of conversation. And think about
the usefulness of conversation and of how we frequently manage to work
together to achieve complex goals, from constructing buildings to putting on
plays to establishing important results in the sciences. I seek a framework
for understanding these basic forms of sociality. And the conjecture I
explore in this talk is that structures of individual planning agency are at
the heart of such sociality.


The lecture is free and open to all.


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