[Craig]
For the latest on this topic:
http://www.amazon.com/Shared-Agency-Planning-Theory-Together/dp/0199339996/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&sr=1-1&qid=1408394217

[Arlo]
Thanks, Craig. I am unfamiliar with Bratman, but will add this to my list to 
take a look at. 

One note, as I had said in a post to Ant, typically those working with the 
sociocultural tradition align with Pirsig's MOQ as a basic tenet of both is 
that sociality emerges from biology. I am not sure I see this in the overview 
for this book where it states "There is an independent reason - grounded in the 
diachronic organization of our temporally extended agency - to see planning 
structures as basic to our individual agency. Once these planning structures 
are on board, we can expect them to play central roles in our sociality." Here, 
I'd want to explore what Bratman means by "planning structures" (and how they 
get "on board"), as I've not encountered anyone using this term before. 

By the way, I do see in Tomasello's newest book (The Natural History of Human 
Language), which I have not read yet either (too much to read, most days I feel 
like Burgess Meredith in the Twilight Zone), now refers "shared intentionality" 
rather than "shared attention", so there ya go. :-)

 
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