An impossibility result on methodological individualism

Publication date

2021-12

Authors

Duijf, HeinORCID 0000-0001-6936-306XISNI 0000000443762179
Tamminga, Allard
Van De Putte, Frederik

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Methodological individualists often claim that any social phenomenon can ultimately be explained in terms of the actions and interactions of individuals. Any Nagelian version of methodological individualism requires that there be bridge laws that translate social statements into individualistic ones. We show that Nagelian individualism can be put to logical scrutiny by making the relevant social and individualistic languages fully explicit and mathematically precise. In particular, we prove that the social statement that a group of (at least two) agents performs a deontically admissible group action cannot be expressed in a well-established deontic logic of agency that models every combination of actions, omissions, abilities, and obligations of finitely many individual agents.

Keywords

Methodological individualism, Impossibility result, Collective admissibility, Modal logic, Expressivity, Bisimulation

Citation

Duijf, H, Tamminga, A & Van De Putte, F 2021, 'An impossibility result on methodological individualism', Philosophical Studies, vol. 178, pp. 4165-4185. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11098-021-01642-z