Collective consciousness
Abstract
In this essay, I explore this idea of a collective consciousness. I propose that
individuals can share in a collective consciousness by forming a collective subject. I begin
the essay by considering and rejecting three possible pictures of collective subjectivity:
the group mind, the emergent mind, and the socially embedded mind. I argue that each
of these accounts fails to provide one of the following requirements for collective subjectivity:
(1) plurality, (2) awareness, and (3) collectivity. I then look to Edmund Husserl’s
idea of ‘social subjectivities’ for a possible account, but I agree with Alfred Schutz that
Husserl fails to explain how such subjectivities are constituted by the conscious acts of
individuals. In an effort to provide such an explanation, I turn to a discussion of our
basic capacities for social intentionality: empathy, intersubjectivity, and co-subjectivity.
In the final section of the essay, I argue that individuals can form a collective subject by
taking a first-person plural perspective and ‘simulating’ the consciousness of the collective
that they form. This account has the required features of plurality, awareness, and
collectivity