This article responds to comments by Francesco Guala and Mattia Gallotti on The Ant Trap. In the replies, I address the relation of new advances in cognitive science to the study of collective attitudes, clarify distinct questions we might ask about grounding and about anchoring in social ontology, defend various forms of pluralism about grounds and about anchors, and discuss the type-token distinction as it applies to social entities.
CITATION STYLE
Epstein, B. (2016). Replies to Guala and Gallotti. Journal of Social Ontology, 2(1), 159–172. https://doi.org/10.1515/jso-2016-0002
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