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THEBODYINACTION:
INTENTION,ACTION-CONSCIOUSNESS,&
COMPULSION
By M. Allen, B.Sc.A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master
of Arts of the University of Hertfordshire.
Submitted July 1st, 2009.
The University of Hertfordshire.
Faculty of Humanities, Languages and Education.
De Havilland Campus.
Hertfordshire.
Copyright: no part of this dissertation may be quoted or reproduced without the authors
permission and due acknowledgement.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I would like to thank Professors Shaun Gallagher and Daniel Hutto for their dedicated
mentoring, philosophical discussions, and ongoing encouragement. I also sincerely thank
the UH and UCF Philosophy Societies for many great nights of debate which contributed
heavily to this project. I would also like to thank Andreas Roepstorff and all of Interacting
Minds for their ongoing support of all off my research. Finally, many thanks to my partner
Julie for putting up with the existential and psychological repercussions intrinsic to these
sort of endeavors, and for teaching me how to use shift-F7.
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PREFACE
Intention and action are perhaps the most prevalent, interesting, and troublesome topics in
all of philosophy. Generating research in metaphysics, ethics, epistemology, psychology
and more, the question of how precisely we manage to effective deliberate and act refuse to
go away. Recently these issues have captivated the empirical sciences and philosophers
alike, with brain cartographers and computer engineers weighing in on human action and
intentionality and working across disciplines to perhaps mark the dawn of a new paradigm.
Although this new era of research is not likely to solve the deepest questions of the
philosophy of mind, we can be sure that the advent of new technologies will bring with it
the same force of ideas that was originally introduced with the advent of the press,
television, or digital computer. At the same time, we will be faced with an ongoing
struggle to redefine our most intimate concepts, as new tools and the perspectives brought
with them redefine our worlds.
Compulsion and freedom are two such concepts, and the present is but an attempt to
traverse a few key issues within them. With that being said, its worth noting that I started
this project with the original intention of doing something purely methodological.
Originally, I wanted to investigate the question ofhow one goes about doing something
like neurophenomenology. I quickly discovered that philosophy is much like the
empirical sciences; one cannot always sit from the sidelines speculating. Youve got to dig
in and really try it out.
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CONTENTS Page
ACKNOLWEDGEMENTS ii
PREFACE iii
INTRODUCTION 1
SECTION 1 DEFINING INTENTION AND ACTION 3
SECTION 1.1 THE DYNAMIC THEORY OF INTENTIONS 7
SECTION 1.2 THE MINIMAL SENSE OF EMBODIED AGENCY 19
SECTION 1.3 MERLEAU-PONTY AND THE DYNAMIC INTENTIONAL BODY 23
SECTION 2 THE PHENOMENOLOGY OF COMPULSION 32
SECTION 2.1 INCENTIVE-SALIENCE AND THE WEAKNESS OF THE WILL 40
SECTION 2.2 OUR ORDINARY ADDICTIONS TO THE LIFE-WORLD 45
CONCLUSION 47
REFERENCES 50
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INTRODUCTION
With respect to action and mental causality, Wittgenstein once pondered; (imagine) some
leaves blown about by the wind saying Now Ill go this way . . . now Ill go that way as
the wind moved them (Anscombe, 1957, p. 6). This is perhaps a rather depressing
sentiment regarding intention and action, as typically wed like to take ourselves to be
reliable agents. Wittgenstein himself was conflicted as to the exact role of the mind in the
production of action, famously asking What is left over if I subtract the fact that my arm
goes up from the fact that I raise my arm? (Wittgenstein, 1958). What is left is the
conscious intention to move, yet the exact nature of prior intention and action remains a
seemingly intractable metaphysical issue.
In contrast to the pervasive metaphysical issues surrounding the link between intention and
action, a great deal of recent phenomenological and neuroscientific literature purports to
examine the experiential component of intentional action, or the sense of agency (SA). I
will argue that while these analyses capture a variety of relevant details concerning SA,
they fail to acknowledge the essentially dynamic and socially embedded nature of the
phenomenology of action. To set the stage for my own arguments I will start by reviewing
some of the terms of the analysis of intention in the work of Searle and Anscombe. I will
then focus on Elisabeth Pacheries dynamic theory of intentions and a phenomenological
account offered by Shaun Gallagher. One of the aims of this essay is to present a critique
of these contemporary views insofar as they offer accounts based only upon reflective and
pre-reflective aspects of intention formation and agency. In contrast, I argue that SA
crucially depends upon the differential involvement of subpersonal, personal, embodied,
environmental, and social factors. I will suggest that the prevailing contemporary models
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is an important and underexplored target for action research, and its phenomenology
reveals fundamental characteristics of action-experience. This will be particularly clear
when we consider the connection between reflective and pre-reflective aspects of action-
consciousness. Before we turn to these considerations, lets get clear about what we mean
by words like intention and action.
SECTION1DEFININGINTENTIONANDACTION
Searles seminal contribution to action theory was his distinction between prior intention
and intention-in-action, found in his workIntentionality. He claimed that there is a
distinction between prior intentions and intentions in action; both are causally self-
referential; and the action for example, of raising ones arm, contains two components, the
experience of acting and the event of ones arm going up (1983, p. 91). Searle further
developed this claim by observing that an action (like shifting gears during ones drive to
work) can be intentional without an immediately preceding prior intention (e.g. I will now
shift gears).
Searle situated this argument through the deduction of the logical conditions of satisfaction
for prior intentions, those being that intentions-in-action are the necessary causal satisfiers
of prior intentions and thus fundamentally inherit their intentional character from the
normative and reflective considerations of the agent. This leads to the idea that
spontaneous actions inherit intentionality insofar as they are the satisfaction ofsome
appropriately relatedprior intention. For example, the intention-in-action of the daily
commute might serve as the condition of satisfaction for the underlying prior intention to
keep ones employment; the prior intent, in the form of a conscious intention formation,
need not accompany each and every individual action. For Searle, an action is intentional
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insofar as it is anything that can be the satisfaction of an intention (1983, p. 80). This of
course does not yet say anything about the production of a sense of agency; well see
shortly however that the intentional component plays an important role in the experience of
SA.
Searles conception, while useful for delimiting the intention and its relation to acting, is
still somewhat sparse for the present considerations. To expand on his argument, we can
trace its origins to Anscombes (1957) thesis that intentional actions are defined by an
appropriate description of action, clarified by a certain sense of the question why? We
might formalize this definition thus: An agent -s intentionally iff a certain sense of the
question Why? applies to As -ing. An example here will help us to understand the
appropriate application; consider the following question and two possible answers:
Q: Why did you knock the cup on the floor?
A1: The cat moved and startled me into knocking it on the floor.
A2: The cat moved and I wanted to spill water on it.
For Anscombe, A1 is an example in which the question why? is refused; the cats moving
is a cause of the action but it is not a reason for acting. The proper answer to a Why?
question is a reason. While a reason can be a cause, not all causes are reasons. The question
why therefore motivates a useful distinction between voluntary and involuntary actions
with respect to intention: all voluntary actions are intentional but most involuntary actions,
to the extent that they refuse application of the question why? are not intentional.1
1An example of an involuntary action that is intentional: If someone promises to hurt my family if
I do not do X, then I may intend to do X, but it is an involuntary action. I can answer the Whyquestion by saying, I did X because I did not want my family hurt.
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This distinction relates to another important clause; an agent A -s intentionally only if A
-s knowingly. Anscombe argued that (to say) a man knows he is doing X is to give a
description of what he is doing under which he knows it (1957, p. 12-13). This is because
you cannot intend to do something you know to be impossible. The intention to fly by
flapping your arms, lacking any possible satisfaction, is merely a poorly defined hoping-to-
fly. The prospective view of action thus entails that intentional actions are necessarily
characterized by sensible beliefs, desires, and the possibility of agent-appropriate reflective
descriptions of action, or, in short, the intentional components of actions. The possibility of
providing a reason, a rational explanation of an action, is thus a necessary component of
intent, although these reflective considerations need not show up at the phenomenological
level for each and every individual intention-in-action. While these considerations do not
necessarily explain the sense of agency, we can safely conclude that SA should in some
way relate to the presence of intentional actions, rather than unintentional movements.
The distinction between agent-appropriate and irrelevant descriptions of action is important
due to a tricky problem that arises when we attempt to describe any given action.
Anscombe pointed out that any particular event can be described in a virtually infinite
variety of ways, many of which are irrelevant to the agent of an action (e.g. Im taking a
drink vs Im reaching for the cup vs Im moving my muscles vs Im activating neurons vs
Im shifting molecules). Concerning an agent who drives his car to work absent mindedly,
according to Searle and Anscombe we can locate the intention of the act in the decision to
go to work, or perhaps in the general decision to work. The subsequent actions of starting
the car and shifting gears, but not of moving particular molecules, thus inherit their
intentional status from the existence of a related prior intent that is qualified by the desire
to go to work, the knowledge of how to get there, and perhaps even the non-observational
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knowledge an agent has of his prior intention. If the agent then decides to quit his job, yet
still ends up absent- mindedly driving to his former work place, we can conclude that his
action lacks intention and consequently, that these actions should in some way undermine
his sense of agency for them.
Anscombes benchmark for the intentional, a given application of the question why, serves
to delimit the intentional from the merely active; she offers the example of actions for
which the answer to the question why? is I dont know, as in the case of the startled
awakening jerk of a sleeping student, claiming these to be involuntary rather than
intentional. We can begin to see here that an important component for the sense of agency
(insofar as its related to the presence of actual intentions) lies in the normative constraints
for actions; our sense of agency appears to be derived from the formation of intentions
within a field of possible reasons for acting.
A further important portion of Anscombes argument relevant to the present investigation
claims that the class of intentional acts are those that fall under a subclass of things that
are known by a man without observation (1957, p. 11-12). Anscombe is arguing that
intentional acts are known to be intentional without the need for inference. We do not
discover our intention to move our legs through the external observation of our legs
moving, but rather have direct, experiential non-observational knowledge of our intending
to move. Another way to say this is that our awareness of our own intention is as subject
rather than as object.2
Just as it would be nonsensical to say, Someone has a toothache, is it I? it would be just
as nonsensical to say, Someone intends to make a cup of tea, is it I? As the subject of the
2 These are Wittgensteins terms and they motivate a discussion of the concept of immunity to errorthrough misidentification (see Shoemaker, 1968).
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inherited from Searle and Anscombe.DTI fundamentally views the experience of acting
intentionally as multi-faceted and complex, involving an experience of intentional
causation, the sense of initiation and the sense of control. As we will see, Pacherie grounds
these claims within her overall theory of SA, dissociating the formation and execution of
intentions into a hierarchy of three interconnected components: the future (F-) intention,4
present (P-) intention, and motor (M-) intention. We will investigate each of these and their
interrelations in turn. First however, we turn to the underlying notion of representation
found in Pacheries theory.
Representations are, for Pacherie, central to any theory of cognition or phenomenology.
She thus bases DTI on the idea that the representations formed at each of these three levels
[F-, P-, & M-intention] play a role in the guidance and control of the ongoing action
(2007, p. 3) and that according to a very influential theory motor control is achieved
through the use of internal models the two main kinds of internal models are forward
and inverse models (2007, p. 3). Thus the transfer of goal-related information and the
subsequent phenomenology of action are presented here as the consequences of a series of
increasingly fine-grained representations. Pacherie claims that these representations and
their resulting phenomenology are the product of simulating the consequences of a given
action and reverse-modeling the prerequisite movements needed to achieve a given goal.
This model, which originates in the motor-control literature, generalizes to higher levels of
representation. Such processes then individually contribute senses of rational (F-
intention), situational (P-intention), and motor control (M-intention).
In regard to one aspect of Pacheries concept of intention, we might consider a criticism
thereof. Prospective meaning here that a feeling agency arises with or prior to the act itself, rather
than after. This contrasts with a retrospective view which takes SA to be the product of a
retrospective, normative inference (see Wegner et al (2004) for a retrospective view of SA).4 Pacherie has taken to calling these Distal Intentions (DI) in her recent work.
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voiced by Gallagher (2007) in the context of his recent arguments against simulation-based
representation as the defining characteristic of the phenomenology of social cognition.
Gallagher argues that an account that involves the idea of naked intentions at the
phenomenological level is incoherent. For Jeannerod and Pacherie (2004), intentions are
represented in the brain, and in experience, as being initially devoid of agent-specific
qualifiers.
This is related to the discussion of mirror neurons or shared representations in the brain.
Mirror neurons are activated when I act or when I observe someone else act. In that sense
they are considered neutral with respect to who is acting that is, neutral with respect to
who the agent is. Accordingly, Georgieff and Jeannerod (1998) have argued that in the
brain the operation of a who system, a specialized brain mechanism, is fundamental for
differentiating between self-produced and other-produced representations of intention and
action. That is, since intentions are represented in the mirror system as neutral with
respect to the agent, agent specification needs to be added to this neutral
representation. The neutral representation is referred to as a naked intention. Jeannerod
and Pacherie (2004) then claim that this same articulated processing is reflected in our
experience of action. We can be aware of an intention, without by the same token being
aware of whose intention it issomething more than the sole awareness of a naked
intention is needed to determine its author. They continue:
When the naked intention one is aware of yields an overt action, the extra
information needed to establish authorship may be found in the outside world. The
question Is this intention mine? would then be answered by answering the
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question: Is this my body performing the corresponding action? (140).5
These claims, for Gallagher and recently Legrand (2007), are suspect insofar as they
conflict with what is phenomenologically the case, namely, that we never experience naked
intentions. Mary either sees John opening the door, or she has a non-observational
awareness that she herself is opening the door. The experience of ones own intention has
been considered by both phenomenologists and Wittegensteinians to be immune to error
through misidentification precisely because it is known without observation, and the
question Is it I who am opening the door? never comes up in this regard. Legrand (2007)
and Marcel (2003), respectively, have gone so far as to question the agent-neutral status of
mirror-neurons, theorizing that the temporal characteristics of the firing patterns of
individual mirror neurons, or ecological information concerning the actions author,
already provide a basis by which to discriminate between self and other-produced actions
(also see Gallagher and Zahavi 2008).
On the phenomenological view then, the assertion that we experience our own intentions in
an agent-neutral way is highly suspect. This however, does not eliminate the explanatory
value of DTI for our phenomenology of agency if one restricts its claims to the reflective
arena of action-consciousness, which might be characterized in a variety of ways including
as a form of simulation or retrospective inference. It is unremarkable to argue that
reflective intention-formation often includes simulation-like considerations of possible
actions and their consequences. This does however open DTI to a new avenue of attack, as
Pacherie clearly intends for the conceptual and simulation-like elements of the P-intention
5 We claim that it is like this with the perception of intention: when Mary watches John open the
door, she is primarily aware of an intention to open the door, rather than being primarily aware thatJohn intends to open the door. Similarly, when Mary herself intends to open the door, she is
primarily aware of an intention to open the door, rather than being primarily aware that she herself
intends to open the door. Let us call this awareness of an unattributed or naked intention(Jeannerod & Pacherie, 2004, p. 116).
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to play a central role in the production of a sense of control and a sense of initiation for an
unfolding action6.
It is problematic to tie the sense of agency exclusively to reflective deliberation or action
monitoring i.e., to claim that I only or primarily experience agency for my actions when I
simulate or theorize about my future goals in order to control or initiate them (e.g.
Pacherie) or when I theoretically infer my authorship over them retrospectively (e.g.
Wegner).Rather we should construct a model that demonstrates the impact of the reflective
on the pre-reflective and vice versa. Pacherie seems to miss the importance of what
phenomenologists call pre-reflective self-awareness, or what Anscombe calls non-
observational awareness.
The question is then, to what extent does explicit (reflective) action monitoring alter and
shape our pre-reflective action-consciousness that is, our awareness of action without
observation. If in fact P-intentions (intentions-in-action) are purely a matter of reflective
monitoring and adjustment, one must wonder how our rich experience of agency in cases
lacking such reflective considerations (i.e., the vast repertoire of pre-reflective actions) can
be produced.7
Pacherie indicates that it is the unconscious M-intention that generates our
pre-reflective sense of agency, in the form of a faint phenomenal echo or merely in a
sense that nothing has gone wrong. To examine this possibility, we first turn to a closer
investigation of the DTI action hierarchy.
6
In a nutshell, our awareness of our movements rests for the most part on our awareness of thepredictions made at the level of P-intentions and on the comparison between these predictions and
consciously available exteroceptive feedback. When the action unfolds smoothly, this awareness is
typically extremely limited. Action specification and action control mechanisms at the level of M-
intentions operate automatically and remain outside the subject's subjective experience (Pacherie,
2007, p. 12).
7 More on this shortly; see my section on the phenomenology of compulsion.
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Future intentions, for Pacherie, correspond to Searles prior intentions and share the
important features of Anscombes theory of intentional action insofar as they concern high-
level decision making processes. F-intentions operate on representations that are
conceptual in nature, dealing primarily with knowledge concerning the means to a desired
outcome and its relation to an overarching goal. For example, consider a man sitting in his
office pondering what needs to be done. First he begins to consider what he has already
done, and from this deduces what is still left to do. Upon realizing that he has still to do his
laundry, he decides to do the task on his way home, thus forming an F-intention. As a final
point, F-intentions do not involve specific sensorimotor considerations, but rather are high-
level goal-representations. It is then the role of the P-intention to translate the intention into
specific sub-goals and action schemas.
The P-intention is intended to capture the process and phenomenology by which concept-
level goal representations are transformed into context-sensitive actions. P-intentions are a
central pillar of DTI, as they integrate a broad range of both conceptual and perceptual
information about the current situation of the agent, the current goal and the context of
action to yield a situated action plan (Pacherie, 2007).The role of the P-intention in
integrating intentional goal-related information with motor processes is crucial for DTI, as
strong empirical evidence, cited by Pacherie, indicates that the content of the sensorimotor
representations are either largely or completely inaccessible to consciousness (ibid, p. 12)
Motor control (neural comparator) processes are thus thought by Pacherie to enter into
action-consciousness only in the form of an error signal, or as Pacherie puts it they are
nothing more than the faint phenomenal echo arising from coherent sensory-motor flow
(ibid, p. 9) that are manifest only when comparison of efferent and afferent processes go
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awry. The role of the P-intention is then to detect this error signal, analyze the actually
unfolding action, and select the appropriate context-specific action commands needed to
get the movement back on track. Of course when she says the P-intention is doing all of
this, Pacherie means that we are, as she envisions each of these processes as unfolding at
the personal level of conscious awareness and consequently, as constituting the primary
content of our action-consciousness.
Gallagher gives several examples of actions in which I might lack an F or P-intention, such
as when I spontaneously answer a knock at the door or drive absent-mindedly to work, yet
retain a phenomenal sense of agency (SA1) for these actions. Although Pacherie primarily
gives a definition of the P-intention that is reflective in nature, I argue, in the next section,
that we might tweak the P-intention to include what Gallagher considers the pre-reflective
intentional aspects of SA1. What is essential if the P-intention is to be a part of our pre-
reflective experience is that it controls an action without taking the body as object, but
rather takes it as subject where my goals and subgoals are themselves performative
extensions of my body. We are going to explore this possibility in detail in a moment, but
for now we might examine a quote from Pacheries earliest explication of DTI where the
P-intention is clearly reflective:
The agent exercises rational control over her action insofar as (1) she is in a
position to judge whether or not this way of accomplishing her action is likely to
lead to success and adjusts it so as to maximize her chances of success (tracking
control) and (2) she is also in a position to judge whether or not it brings about
undesirable side-effects and corrects it accordingly (collateral control) (Pacherie,
2006, p. 150).
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certainly contributes to a reflective sense of agency (SA2) by providing first person
evidence that we have some control and have something to do with the outcome of an
action. We can also agree with Gallagher that this conscious monitoring itself generates an
efferent or minimal sense of agency for the act of control.8
But can there be such a thing as
a pre-reflective P-intention?
What can be said about a pre-reflective P-intention? Consider the following. As I sat at my
desk pondering this question, I had a clear F-intention to work out my answer. In the
process of working it out, I suddenly leapt out of my chair and began pacing about, and I
neither made an explicit intention to do so (I never thought to myself, I should get up and
walk around) nor deliberated over whether this might help my thought. Rather, pacing is
something I regularly and intentionally do to gain a better insight, and as such it is
something I am likely to do whenever I am confronted with a philosophical conundrum. I
pace pre-reflectively, as my conscious attention is fully take up with the problem on which
I am reflecting. There is, however, a certain pre-reflective conscious monitoring involved
in my pacing; I see the wall and dont walk into it, but turn just in time to avoid collision,
all the while thinking hard about the problem at hand. To the extent that this monitoring is
conscious rather than non-conscious, it certainly functions like a P-intention (I intend not
to collide with the wall, for that would certainly upset my thinking, etc.). Pacing and
thinking go together in this case, and the P-intention for pacing likely serves the sense of
agency I have for thinking through the problem as well.
What I am suggesting here is that the P-intention and its contribution to action-
consciousness should not be equated to purely a reflective action monitoring nor to purely
8 Briefly, Gallagher (in press) suggests that the formation of an intention (F- or P-) is itself anaction, and should then involve its own sense of agency.
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pre-reflective intentions.9
In either case I will experience authorship. Rather, in many cases
the sense of agency is complex, with reflective components contributing to pre-reflective
and vice versa. One source of the pre-reflective sense of agency is my bodily movement;
my M-intention, which we now turn to in more detail
Pacheries motor intention (M-intention) plays a unique role in her exposition of DTI.
Not only does she describe the M-intention in terms of its basic underlying mechanism
(forward and inverse modeling), but she sees the general idea of these models as playing a
unifying, connective role between the F-, P-, and M-intentions, encompassing the
formation and execution of intentions. The complete translation from reflective cognition
to action is then to implement rational, conceptual deliberations (F-intentions) via the
specific selection of motor schemas (P-intentions) that are then implemented by
subpersonal motor-comparison processes (M-intentions), all on the same general type of
mechanism of forward and inverse modeling.
Figure 1: Forward Modeling and the Sense of Agency (from Haggard, 2005)
The forward and inverse modeling framework (see figure 1) is a computational model
derived from engineering and adopted by neuroscientists as an influential explanation of
9 Later well explore in detail some examples of pre-reflective P-intentions, using examples fromsports and other regular activities.
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the computational basis of online action execution (e.g. Jordan & Wolpert, 1999; Wegner,
2004; Wolpert, 1997). This model is intended to capture the basic information processing
by which we are able to simulate the consequences of our actions and reverse-engineer the
prerequisite actions for a given outcome.
To give a brief overview of these comparator models, the key conception is that as prior
intentions are translated into specific motor commands, an efferent copy of the command is
generated and used to create a forward model that compares intention to the issued motor
command, and predicts the appropriate sensory state that this command should generate if
the action is executed successfully. Then, as sensory (re-afferent) information from the
actual execution of the action reaches the system, the comparator verifies that the action is
on track. The same mechanism can compute an inverse model to calculate the most
likely commands for generating a specific action. The essential role of the comparator is
thus to compare intention, efferent commands and sensory feedback in real time. If the
models align then the action has been executed in accordance with the original intention,
and the agent experiences a basic implicit sense of authorship for the action, or at least a
sense that nothing has gone wrong. If the comparison reveals a discrepancy between actual
and predicted feedback however, an error signal is generated, that Pacherie suggests is
then brought into conscious attention/awareness and dealt with via P-intention action
monitoring. Action monitoring at this level would correspond to the agents reflecting over
the goal (F-intention), directing attention to the action (P-intention), and correcting the
issue by making adjustments in motor commands (M-intention).
Imperative to the function of the P-intention is Pacheries observation that the sensorimotor
representations of the M-intention are in principle inaccessible to consciousness and are
as a result unable to provide the contextual action-related content necessary for the a sense
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of control for an unfolding action (e.g. turn the handle, hit the brake, smile now). Rather
than providing an explicit consciousness of the action then, the output of the M-intention
serves as an error signal that motivates the formulation and execution of a P-intention. DTI
would then appear to claim that this is the limits of pre-reflective action consciousness,
with our present-centered action consciousness being effectively locked out of the fine
tuned sensorimotor dynamics of the action itself and characterized primarily by reflective
consciousness.
To support the claim that motor representations are subpersonal, Pacherie relies on recent
empirical literature indicating that proprioceptive and visuomotor representations can be
manipulated in experimental situations while experimental participants report no
consciousness of these alterations (Fourneret & Jeannerod, 1998; Slachevsky et al., 2001).
Additionally, recent experiments by Marcel (2003) indicate that conscious control of an
ambiguous action occurs only when the alteration exceeds 15. These findings support the
inaccessibility of motor-representation to consciousness and highlight the function of the
P-intention in monitoring and controlling an action, especially when things start to go
noticeably wrong. If proprioceptive representations cannot deliver the specific contents of
an action, but rather provide only a sense that something has gone awry, the function of the
P-intention is crucial for selecting specific actions needed to remain consistent with the
deliberations of the F-intention or to execute novel actions as a situation unfolds in an
unexpected manner.
In summary, Pacherie views the unfolding of action-consciousness as a computational co-
product of the motor systems control of an action and the sense of initiation generated by
forming an intention. Our sense of agency, for Pacherie, is created any time we engage in
action planning, sensorimotor monitoring, and motor activity and is relational insofar as
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these elements of control, initiation, and awareness are differentially manipulated. Taking a
cue from Gallaghers critique of DTI, I suggest that the P-intention might not only include
reflective action monitoring and control but also forms of pre-reflective awareness in
smooth coping that themselves contribute to a sense of agency. To explore this possibility
in detail, we turn to Gallaghers model of the minimal sense of agency.
SECTION1.2THEMINIMALSENSEOFEMBODIEDAGENCY
Gallagher, in collaboration with neuroscientist Manos Tsarkis (Tsakiris et al. 2007), and
based on the work of Tsakiris and Haggard,10
developed an account of the content and
sources of what he calls SA1 or the pre-reflective sense of authorship. As Ive mentioned,
Gallagher also recently rejected aspects of Pacheries phenomenology of agency on the
grounds that the F- and P-intentions, described as deliberation and conscious control
processes, do not explain our pre-reflective sense of agency. To clarify the sort of
integration were here striving toward, well briefly review this debate in order to see both
points of contention and commensuration. Gallagher, in brief, argues that many actions
appear to retain a phenomenal SA in the absence of prior intent or reflection, a point on
which Pacherie agrees (her concept of a faint phenomenal echo of authorship (2007, p.
12) in the case of smoothly unfolding action), and attributes like Gallagher, to the function
of the comparator.
Although Gallagher doubts the P-intentions ability to constitute our pre-reflective action-
consciousness, he does argue that in cases where the P-intention does arise (such as an
unfamiliar action) its deliberative and monitoring functions are likely to enhance SA1,
primarily through the reinforcement of an overall reflective (SA2) experience of agency.
10 See Fotopoulou et al. (2008); Longo et al (2009); Tsakiris, Prabhu, & Haggard (2006) for moreon this.
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What is being argued in Gallaghers model then is that the purely reflective aspects of the
F- and P-intention cannot constitute our pre-reflective action consciousness, which itself is
a necessary condition for SA. Rather SA arises out of the complex collusion of reflective
and pre-reflective processes (see figure 2), with dynamic communication occurring
between both levels.
This communication will be important later when we examine compulsion, but for now we
can accept Gallaghers critique and move towards integration in which P-intentions include
both reflective and pre-reflective elements. What we are primarily interested in here is
getting the constitution of SA1 correct, as we want to specifically explore the dynamics of
reflective and pre-reflective action-consciousness.
Figure 2: A combined model of SA1 and DTI (Gallagher, 2009).
Gallaghers own model of our pre-reflective action-consciousness (SA1) also depends
upon the forward/inverse comparator model to explain our action-consciousness, refining
the model via recent work by Haggard (2005) and Tsarkiris (2007). SA1, on Gallaghers
view, occurs whenever a human organism engages in motor-control activity. To illustrate
the difference between a sense of agency and sense of ownership for actions, Gallagher
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invokes the image of an individual who has been pushed from behind in contrast to an
individual who has just taken a step forward. In the first case, we can assume that the
person would report feeling that his body moved (he would have a sense of ownership for
the movement, and would say that he moved) but that, due to the lack of efference, he
would not report authoring the action as he would in the case intentionally taking a step
forward (Gallagher, 2000). The phenomenology of action for Gallagher is thus grounded in
part (and specifically in its pre-reflective part) in an implicit bodily consciousness
generated by efferent and re-afferent sub-personal processes; we are pre-reflectively
conscious of our action authorship as long as our motor system is healthy, in contrast to
when these processes breakdown in schizophrenic delusions of control or related agency
pathologies.
Gallaghers primary concern with DTI is that there are many instances in which I can have
SA without any prior deliberation, as in the case in which I suddenly jump out of my chair
to answer a knock at the door. Gallagher does note that certain intentional and situational
control-aspects enter into SA1, supporting the idea that a less judgment-oriented P-
intention might function between the boundary of reflective and pre-reflective action. We
will shortly explore the complexity of a P-intention dynamically conceived, but what I
have been suggesting here is that we might better view the P-intention not as purely
reflective or pre-reflective, but rather as marking the murky transitional boundary between
the two, a point supported by Gallaghers model.
Still, I will argue that there are elements of both DTI and Gallaghers SA1 that appear
overly static and depersonalized. The emphasis on explicit conscious action-monitorings
by DTI as fundamental components of action-consciousness that are clearly not necessary
constituents of SA1, in that they are essentially second-order, reflective phenomena,
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highlights the importance of the considerations put forth by Gallagher. Likewise, even in
the integrative model pictured above, in which Gallaghers comparator process colludes
with Pacherie-esque reflective actions to produce SA, there is no consideration of the
environmental and social factors that, as we will shortly see, directly impact the sense of
agency. If the DTI is to be fleshed out or altered to better explain why things like F- and
P-intentions contribute to SA1, we must explore in detail some cases in which the
contributories to the sense of agency are as complex as action-consciousness itself, in order
to determine precisely what contributions social, cognitive, and environmental factors
make to the sense of agency.
Even for an integrated conception of the P-intention, when an action goes awry, its role is
to determine what has gone wrong, to bring it back in line with the related F-intention, and
to execute the appropriate actions, all of which contributes not only to SA2 but to our
online SA1. Haggards recent work strongly supports this view, as he has found that
intentional binding11
is modulated only by the presence of an actual intention rather than
when an action is generated by applying trans-cranial magnetic stimulation to the motor
cortices. The intentional or control related aspects are thus crucial elements of comparator
processes. Gallagher agrees with this:
The intentional aspect (what gets accomplished, or fails to get accomplished, by the
action) and the motor (or efferent) aspect (the sense that I am causing or controlling
my bodily movement) enter into SA1These aspects, and SA1 more generally,
remain pre-reflective in so far as neither of them are things that I reflectively dwell
11Intentional binding is a demonstrated phenomenon in which participants estimate the subjective
time between an intention and its worldly effect as being a shorter duration for intentional asopposed to non-intentional movements (see Haggard, 2005).
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upon, and indeed, as I arrive at my office I have forgotten most, if not all, of the
details involved in my driving (2007, p. 10).
Our experience of an action appears to fall within a continuum between the case in which I
follow a clear DTI-style path from F- to P- to M-intentions, the case in which I act totally
pre-reflectively without any reflective awareness of my broad or situation-specific goals,
and those circumstances in which neither extreme holds. The possibility of such a middle
ground should then lead us to question the dividing line between reflective and pre-
reflective acts and their interrelationship.
Ive gone into the analysis of the sense of agency in some significant detail. Ive done this
not only to show the complexity of this analysis, but also to set the stage to be able to show
that even this complexity is not sufficient to the phenomenon. Whether we take Pacheries
hierarchical structure of intentions, or Gallaghers pre-reflective phenomenology, or, as I
have argued, some combination of these, the basic explanandum of the P-intention is
confined to either mental or brain states (reflective deliberation, perceptual monitoring,
phenomenal experience, comparators and efferent signals, etc.). The processes under
discussion seem to play out entirely within the head. I will argue, however, that if action
occurs in the world,this kind of analysis requires a phenomenological fleshing out. To
better characterize the dynamics between action, world, and action-consciousness, we turn
now to Merleau-Ponty.
SECTION1.3MERLEAU-PONTYAND THEDYNAMICINTENTIONALBODY
Merleau-Ponty helps to illustrate the inadequacy of deeming action as merely being the
result of translations between reflective goal representations and subpersonal processes.
We need some notion of living action, or of action in the life-world, to flesh out the above
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account of SA. The life-world, following Merleau-Ponty, is not a static object to be acted
upon by a Cartesian observer but rather a performative extension of the dynamic body. We
can see this clearly one of his examples.
For the player in action the football field is not an object, that is, the ideal
term which can give rise to an indefinite multiplicity of perspectival views and
remain equivalent under its apparent transformations. It is pervaded with lines
of force (the yard line; those that demarcate the penalty area) and
articulated in sectors (for example, the openings between the adversaries)
which call for a certain mode of action and which initiate and guide the
action as if the player were unaware of it (Merleau-Ponty, 1983, p. 168).
Here we can see the possibility of a phenomenology of action; on Merleau-Pontys view
actions do not unfold in static relationship between observer and object but rather in the
dynamic relationship between the agent and its world. The actions I take structure my
intentions and alter my experience of my living body, and moreover, they do so in real
time.12 Merleau-Ponty is arguing that action and the experience of acting are necessarily
grounded in a pragmatic kind of relationship between the player and the field; as the player
moves the fields significance and visuospatial properties will remain in dynamic
fluctuation with that of the players intentions and the properties of the field itself.
The field is not given to him, but present as the immanent term of his
practical intentions; the player becomes one with it and feels the direction
of the goal, for example, just as immediately as the vertical and the
horizontal planes of his own body (ibid, p.169).
12 those actions in which I habitually engage incorporate the instruments into themselves andmake them play a part in the original structure of my own body (Merleau-Ponty, 2002, p. 104).
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How are we to conceptualize the living experience of an intention then? If we think of
intentions as dynamically co-created by the environment and the agent, are we diluting the
notion of intention to an unrecognizable status? This may be a tempting conclusion for
many; why bother with the fancy descriptions of phenomenology if we can rely on
traditional conceptual distinctions found in philosophy and psychology (or even folk
psychology) to define the boundaries of intention and action? Merleau-Ponty presents us
with a difficult challenge; if intentions are themselves specified in co-relation to the world,
in what sense are they intentions, which we usually conceive of as internal mental states?
Surprisingly the answer may actually lay in the functions and transitions of the P-intention,
in transforming my body into a living vehicle for my objective intentions.
Merleau-Ponty is clear about what we cannot take the P-intention to be, namely a complete
objectification of my own intention and action, as satisfied by an objectified body. Rather,
we are faced with a more subtle relationship between the essentially objectifying nature of
deliberative intention, in which I take my world as an object to be acted upon, and the
living execution of the intention through my body the only possible causal satisfier of my
intention. We are now faced with a question concerning the relationship between
consciousness and action, or the dividing line between reflective and pre-reflective action.
Merleau-Ponty suggests that this relationship is not as neat as Pacherie might prefer, but
rather indicates a P-intention that is neither fully reflective nor fully pre-reflective. To what
extent does intentional behavior then require an explicit consciousness of action or,
alternatively, a non-objectifying action-consciousness, and how might we construe what
we mean here by conscious? Again, Merleau-Ponty is illustrative.
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It would not be sufficient to say that consciousness inhabits this milieu. At
this moment consciousness is nothing other than the dialectic of milieu and
action. Each maneuver undertaken by the player modifies the character of
the field and establishes in it new lines of force in which the action in turn
unfolds and is accomplished, again altering the phenomenal field (ibid, p.
169).
Not only is the perception of the field a function of the living body, but also, the field as
experienced belongs to the nature of the intentions themselves. Furthermore, on the
phenomenological view intentions are forward-integrated with the action of the body. Thus
the intention and goal are nothing other than the dialectic of milieu and action and each
action modifies the character of the field.
On the one hand, in this regard, Pacheries phenomenology of action is troublesome insofar
as her construal of intention and intention-in-action appears to view our living intention in
starkly objective and observational terms, as the mere simulation of myself-in-the-world-
as-object rather than as conscious movement through a world loaded with significance, and
affordances dynamically shaping my own future intentions. On the other hand, we can also
begin to see why the sub-conscious workings of motor-schemas are not problematic for a
phenomenology of agency, which is consistent with the empirical studies mentioned by
Pacherie.
These considerations do not radically damage her overall conceptual organization, but
rework it from the inside so that we can begin to see how the F- and P-intentions might be
dynamically structured by action-in-the world. A dynamic theory of intentions, to the
extent that it integrates the kind of phenomenological insight provided by Merleau-Ponty
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with a slightly more embodied analysis of intention that follows the lines drawn by
Pacherie, consequently provides an excellent description of one important cognitive aspect
of intention and action, in both a pre-reflective and reflective sense.
What might an embodied version of the relationship between prior intent, agency-
consciousness, and action look like? One illustrative example is found in Andy Clarks
now famous description of a baseball fielder catching a fly-ball. On Pacheries view, the
fielder might consciously translate the cognitive F-intention win the gameinto the
simulative P-intention catch the balland then constantly monitor the position of the ball
in order to calculate (using a forward model) the precise movements needed to catch the
ball.
However, Clark reports an empirical demonstration of what this hypothesis overlooks;
recent research has indicated that the fielder is able to catch the ball not by projecting the
absolute trajectory of the ball but rather by naturally exploiting inherent sensorimotor
dynamics of the fielders body. The fielder catches the ball, Clark argues, by simply
running so that the optical image of the ball appears to present a straight-line constant
speed trajectory against the visual background (Clark, 2008, p. 18). The calculations
necessary to catch the ball are not performed solely within the sterile environment of the
comparator or in a plan drawn out by prior intent; they rather take place in a distributed
network that includes the agents body and the environment, informed by the task at hand.
This view of action is remarkably similar to that expressed by Merleau-Ponty; actions are
performed within the relationship of body to world and intention-formation dynamically
reflects this relationship.
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A few considerations are of importance here. First, the example of catching a baseball is
not here meant to characterize all actions, but rather to serve as a metaphorical example of
the relationship between intention and action. An action like catching a baseball, may for
example differ from that of writing a research paper or there may even be great differences
between a completely nave, as opposed to expert player catching the ball, in the sense that
the more complex an action is, or how familiar I am with the action (how much practice I
have with it) will likely increase the need for explicit, deliberation and observational action
control, an important point well explore further in a moment. For now, the suggestion here
is that generally speaking, in contrast to the top-down account provided by DTI, the P-
intention is better characterized as a dynamic dialectic between the conscious registration
of an intention and the body-in-the-world, where feed-forward aspects of intention and
dynamic feedback from the actions and the world themselves collude to inform both SA1
and SA2.
If the teleological aspects of intentions inform our pre-reflective action, perhaps we can
better understand the contribution of the F- and P-intention to our action-consciousness in
terms of Anscombes claim that we have non-observational knowledge (NOK) of our
intentions. Although Anscombe discussed NOK primarily in terms of introspective
reflection, the concept relates to the phenomenological notion of the living body insofar as
it denotes the basic relation between things I am intending to do and my awareness that it is
Iwho is intending them. Merleau-Ponty describes this as the role of the implicit body-
world relation in structuring my intention and conversely, the role of my intention in
structuring my relation to the world. Anscombe recognized however, that the observational
knowledge and reflective monitoring central to the P-intention play an important role in
our awareness of the effects our intentions have on the world:
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My knowledge of what I do is not by observation. A very clear and interesting
case of this is that in which I shut my eyes and write something. I can say what
I am writing. And what I say I am writing will almost always in fact appear on
the paper. Now here it is clear that my capacity to say what is written is not
derived from any observation. In practice of course what I write will very likely
not go on being very legible if I dont use my eyes; but isnt the role of all our
observational knowledge in knowing what we are doing like the role of the eyes
in producing successful writing? That is to say, once given that we have
knowledge or opinion about the matter in which we perform intentional actions,
our observation is merely an aid (Anscombe, 1957, p. 57).
The intention with which I act (which we might here understand as the intentional aspect of
SA1) is known to me without a need for inference from sensory (observational)
information, and this information provides a valuable means by which we can fine-tune
and progressively improve our relation to the world. This is perhaps what Pacherie means
to highlight with her account of the P-intention, yet we can also argue that Anscombes
own understanding of NOK, while progressive for her time, lacked the sort of embodied,
culturally embedded, enactive conception of action-consciousness we are here developing.
In addition to this clarification, there is more we can say about the role of experience in
shaping intention and action-consciousness.
For Merleau-Pontys football player, the movement of the player through the field
dynamically shapes whatever P-intention he may form in playing, i.e. to shoot this goal or
slide-tackle some opponent, and these individual actions in turn alter the perceptual
saliencies and phenomenological presentation of the field, and therefore whatever P-
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intentions might be formed in the course of the game. Here we might consult another
relation by which the formation of P-intentions is dynamically structured by the agent-
world relationship. What I am referring to here is the phenomenon of transparent coping,
discussed by Merleau-Ponty in terms of maximal grip, or the observation of the bodys
tendency to refine its responses so as to bring the current situation closer to an optimal
gestalt (Dreyfus, 2002, 367).
Merleau-Ponty, following Husserl, discussed at length the role of experience in shaping the
way the world presents itself to me and the effects of expertise on my action execution.
This relationship is characterized by an increasingly specialized presentation of the world
to an agent in terms of affordances, and the bodys ability to schematically integrate
increasingly complex actions as expertise with a particular problem set is gained.13
An
example will help to illustrate this point.
Lets imagine Im on my way to a speed-dating function, and that Im 6 feet tall.
Additionally, Ive lived my entire life amongst entirely 5-foot tall peers and thus consider
myself to be a rather tall, strapping lad. Now imagine that upon entering the room where
the speed-dating is going to occur, I notice (as they turn to gawk at me) that all the women
in the room are 6.5 feet tall. Assuming Im sensitive to the difference, its clear that I might
now experience a rather different sense of agency for whatever Im going to do to get a
date, than I would if I had entered a room where all the women were 5-feet tall. My prior
experiences are here shaping the affordances for action I perceive in the group of women,
and whether I consider myself tall or short enough to get one of them to go out with me can
really only be specified in relation to the specific circumstance I find myself in, and the
13 Husserl gave a famous example of this in terms of a layman and an archeologist that both arrive
in Greenland. For the layman, Greenland may be a confusing, unfamiliar, and bewildering place.
For the archeologist, Greenland instead represents a complex sociocultural history that is rich withmeaning and action-affordances (Husserl, 1970, 2nd Investigation).
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relation of that circumstance to my previous actions. Any situated reflective considerations
(P-intentions) I might undertake (which girl to talk to, whether or not to order a drink, or
two) will start from this point, and whichever action I choose (insofar as I perceive it as a
successful action) will then shape my ongoing perception of my chances to win a date.14
The notion that agents pre-reflectively inhabit a world implicitly shaped by the body is a
common idea throughout phenomenological texts. It is thus troublesome that Pacheries
phenomenology of agency is without considerations of the living structure of action. It
would be a mistake however, to throw out the phenomenological baby with the
reductionistic bath water. Pacheries model does not exclude a place for certain aspects of
our pre-reflective action-consciousness, namely the significance of pre-reflective action
monitoring and the teleological/intentional aspects of forward-looking intentions in
contributing to both SA1 and SA2. Furthermore, her model shares more in common with
contemporary phenomenologically inspired neurocognitive models of agency than it lacks;
both make heavy use of the notion of an inherent neural mechanism that compares efferent
and afferent sensorimotor information to produce, in one fashion or another, our minimal
sense of agency.
Pacheries hierarchical model then, if made to accommodate the phenomenological notion
of the pre-reflective relation of body and world, presents an ambitious and effective
schema for the relationship between purely pre-reflective action and the deliberative
processes that undeniably underlie some of our intentional acts and co-create our sense of
agency. To further this analysis, well examine the phenomenology of compulsion in order
14Of course, I may have worked out an entire strategy for just such a case (F-intention), which
would then further structure my perception of my chances and consequently, the P-intentions andM-intentions Ill engage in.
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to show another important dimension that is so far missing in the previous discussion; the
social, interpersonal, and intersubjective elements of action-consciousness.
SECTION2
THE
PHENOMENOLOGY
OF
COMPULSION
To explore the relationship between the reflective and pre-reflective in detail, well
construct a phenomenological account of extreme compulsive behavior (of the sort
involved in drug addiction) in order to shed light on the nature of every day action-
consciousness. My argument is that through the example of extreme compulsive behavior,
we can begin to understand the essential relationship between SA1 (the pre-reflective
components of action-consciousness) and SA2 (the prospective and retrospective reflective
components of action-consciousness). But we will also be able to see from this example
that even this integrated account of the sense of agency is not sufficient, and that we need
to extend the account to include the environmental and especially social aspects.
To begin, we picture our imaginary participant as an ordinary individual with typical
beliefs and desires concerning broad-level life goals, i.e. the pursuit of health, liberty, and
happiness. Imagine that this individual, never having desired to become a drug addict, and
in full possession of the belief that drug taking behaviors are negative behaviors, enters an
environment in which his peers are consummately using heroin. Upon entering this new
social environment, the agent finds himself surrounded by peers quite happy to inject
mind-altering drugs (heroin, in this case) into their veins. For the sake of argument, our
agent also wants to fit in and be a part of his social group, and so he eventually gives in and
tries an injection.
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At this particular moment, lets focus in on our actors body. As he lifts the syringe to his
arm, it is safe to assume that his motor system generates an efferent copy for each
individual action. If we accept the comparator model of the SA1, it seems true that
throughout the unfolding of this action his system made use of congruent forward/inverse
models and is therefore experiencing an undiminished pre-reflective experience of agency,
SA1. It is also true that he had a positive prior-intention to live well, be happy, and so
forth. Insofar as he actually made a decision (inject heroin or perhaps stay close to my
friends), he also formed a proper P-intention that enabled him to ensure the drug was
properly injected. Thus our agent, as he partakes in drug taking behaviors that conflict with
his overall intentions, could be said on both DTI and minimal conceptions of agency (SA1)
to have maintained his own sense of agency.
This however seems somehow incomplete. It seems much more likely something might
have felt off the moment he lifted the needle to his arm. This could cash out at the
intentional level in a variety of ways. Pre-reflectively (without retrospection), his prior
stance that drugs are contra the good life might alter the presentation of the needle or room
such that while he does not stop to reflect on his akrasia he may feel a certain will-related
anxiety.15
Perhaps the needle is perceived as more menacing, or he feels a certain anxiety,
manifest within his pre-reflective awareness as a feeling of guilt (or naughtiness, or
recklessness) that tints his SA116
. Perhaps its merely something in his body, a sudden
flush and increased heartbeat; the effects of a sudden dump of cortisol into the blood
stream by the brain. The point is simply that, in the presence of a functioning motor
system, even if the act of injection is something he consciously decides, controls, or
initiates (P-intention), his SA1 will diminish. One possible explanation is that his P-
15
If he did stop to reflect, he might flee the room or at least debate the issue.16 This is similar to the case in which we find ourselves wandering in the kitchen, quite sure wecame for something but completely unaware of our specific intention.
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intention, which is means-end coherent with his F-intention to maintain his friendships, is
in conflict with the F-intention to live well. We might call this an intention-intention
disturbance, in which two mutually desired reflective or pseudo-reflective acts compete for
satisfaction, creating a conflict where the agent must form P- and M-intentions in what is
essentially a no-win situation.
This sort of conflict would certainly undermine the agents pre-reflective sense of agency,
and even more so should the agent resolve the conflict by actually injecting the drug. In
this case, there would be multiple sources for a positive sense of agency; the formation of
the F-intention to maintain ones friendships, the P-intention to inject the drug, and the
sensorimotor processes of efference and re-afference from the actual act of injecting the
drug, as well as multiple negative sources for a sense of agency; the social status of heroin,
his peers behavior, the desire to conform, and the needle itself. If the balance tips too far
in one direction, the agent is almost certain to experience some loss of agency. Working
out the precise direction of this loss is a difficult task.
One counter-intuitive possibility is that the co-ordinate presence of the intermixed
examples of strong positive and negative influence, where the presence of a strongly
positive signal (I am injecting heroin) has an overall negative affect; if there is a strong
innate bodily agency for simple motor acts, then one would feel a strong sense of
immediate authorship for a highly self-disruptive act, and the net effect should then be
negative. Thus far these effects remain pre-reflective; we can however increased the
amount of reflectivity before, during, and after the act and presumably increase the
resultant damage to both SA1 and SA2.
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The actual world-agent dynamics now become highly relevant for determining the actual
course of agency-loss; as the act itself becomes habitual and true addiction develops, the
link between immediate and extended agency may itself sever, with the agent possessing
little to no self-control for drug related stimuli. At this juncture the agency loss is near
catastrophic; the drug taker can no longer successfully control or initiate immediate
intentions (hold off this injection until after work) nor reconcile this fact with their life-
narrative. The agents dreams and long-term intentions have largely been set aside, or they
become examples of non-intentional hoping without satisfaction. Finally, ruminations or
reminiscences over the agents pre-drug life or post drug future are now likely to only
further undermine the self-as-agent narrative (SA2). The addict is now not unlike an
injured animal that has fallen into a mud pit; without strong and determined external
assistance, escape from the negative spiral becomes less possible with every act.
The sense of agency is thus very complex, as multiple sources can come in conflict with
one another depending upon the totality of an agents prior intentions and the actual motor
acts he engages in.17
What is important here is thus not only the content of the intentions,
but also their context and the particular dynamics between SAs varying sources. Certainly
my drive to work will not (typically) undermine my SA1, yet if I find myself in an
impulsive mood and inject heroin when I get home, I will feel out of control as I commit
the act (diminishing SA1) and thereafter (diminishing SA2). This highlights that
something is missing from both DTI and the minimal model, and well discuss some
possible candidates shortly.
17This last point is crucial, as it points towards the actual acts-in-the-world as a source of agency.
In a nutshell, different acts should have different experiences of agency, regardless of the presenceof F-, P-, and M-intentions.
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Of course, in the case of the nave drug taker, the fact that his motor system is functioning
informs us that at some basic level, he maintains a sense of SA1 insofar as if we were to
ask him what he was doing, hed sayIam injecting drugs. The loss of SA1 is thus initially
incomplete, falling short in kind and severity from the radical disruption wed expect to
find in a severe case of paranoid schizophrenia.The next time the agent forms a drug-
related intention, or perhaps a more general intention to do anything requiring intention-
action consistency, we could easily expect his reflective sense of agency (SA2) to in turn
be diminished. Each of these examples is meant to show that it is the dynamic between the
variable sources for agency that itself results in whatever action-consciousness comes
about from particular actions, and that these dynamics can be disrupted in a variety of ways
depending upon the agent and the particular world the agent is a part of.
We can conclude that his continuing actions of piercing his skin and depressing the plunger
in some way dramatically undermine his SA1 and SA2. We can now explore a third
possibility: suppose that merely being in the room with his peers, prior to any drug-taking,
threatens his sense of agency.
However, this supposition entails that we reject the thesis that the sense of agency can be
located solely in the deliberative process or the computations of the comparator. The
physical and social environment may have an effect on SA. If even prior to injecting any
drugs, the agent experiences some diminishment in the sense of agency, what are some
possible sources for this experience? Recalling our example of speed-dating, we might now
begin to consider the role that interpersonal factors play in structuring our sense of agency.
Actions are embedded in contexts that are both physical and social. Intention formation is
itself a process performed within a social context where possibilities are defined by social
norms and affordances.
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At the interpersonal level, we perform elaborate acts of joint-attention and social cognition
through a real-time allocation with respect to agency.18
At the individual level, the kinds of
considerations vital, not only to the deliberative process, but even to the comparator model
are not divorced from social factors. Consider, for example, the many studies of the neural
correlates of the sense of agency that involve the contrast between sense of self-agency and
sense of other-agency (e.g. Chaminade, Meltzoff, & Decety, 2005; Farrer et al., 2003).
Simply put, if I want to interact with you, your intentional state becomes a crucial element
in my comparators sensory input box. This view excludes neither the reflective nor the
pre-reflective; it allows room for both ongoing reflection upon actions and the pre-
reflective awareness of action. It allows for this, and at the same time it takes seriously the
idea that the subject is in-the-world, embodied and embedded in a social environment that
contributes or diminishes his sense of agency.
If the sense of agency is relational and not dependent on any singular process, one might
object that action-consciousness seems to rely on the explicit re-evaluation of our actions.
Perhaps it is retrospective evaluation that ties it all together and creates a sense of agency
(see Graham & Stephens, 1994; Wegner, 2004).
This objection however, does not consider that the specific mechanism driving agency
breakdown in the case of compulsive or addictive behavior is not necessarily a cognitive
re-evaluation of past actions but rather, a direct and immediate loss or diminishment of
SA1 due to the conflict dynamic between SA1 and SA2 at multiple levels, as previously
indicated. Phenomenology supports this claim; our pre-reflective experience takes the body
18 In the sense that a joint-activity requires an ongoing negotiation in terms ofwhom the group is to
allocate agency to and how much agency should be shared amongst particular agents (leaders, sub-
leaders, followers, etc) for a given task as well as more complex dynamic/temporal considerationsdepending upon the task at hand.
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as subject, rather than as object. The body as subject is not the object of retrospective,
reflective introspection, but rather continually structures our engagement with the world.
The phenomenal sense of agency then is not necessarily generated in retrospection, but is
rather a fundamental property of bodily activity that is dynamically shaped in the agent-
world relation.
To further clarify my argument, I would like to suggest that the above vignette captures an
aspect of our everyday activity. We can draw this conclusion from our everyday
phenomenology, in which many of the actions we engage in on a daily basis are not
explicitly intentional in the clear sense that we reflectively create a deliberative action plan
that we then endorse and translate into activity; rather they are characterized as pre-
reflective (Gallagher, in press). This is not meant to suggest that the reflective is not
essential for a healthy intention-action dynamic, rather the previous examples show the
exact opposite of this.
Take for example the sweatshop worker, laboring tirelessly for little to no personal
incentive beyond survival. Here the mundane, pointless nature of the workers daily task
can have a deleterious effect on the sense of agency. And like our drug user, we can
anticipate the efferent SA1 to conflict with the intention to live well, where every act of
sweatshop labor further cements for the man that he will never fulfill his dreams.
Eventually, wed predict a breakdown of both SA1 and SA2, as the tireless litany of
actions becomes so automatic as to no longer elicit a sense of immediate agency. The
mans life has become one solid line, and he may feel on his deathbed as if hes been little
more than an automaton for the duration of his life. This kind of alienation, driven by
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structures of economic and social arrangements, robs such individuals of their sense of
agency.
Again, we can start to see the influence of society and interpersonal affordances on our
action-consciousness. Many of us are familiar with such phenomena. We groan in agony
over the thought of sitting through a pointless faculty meeting, but we do it because we
have to. We might feel a sense of unease as we enter a party full of tall beautiful women, or
lose ourselves in the kiss of our lover in a sort of euphoric agency-loss. Many young adults
faced with the grim prospects of finding a job in a failing economy can relate to the sense
of dread and possibly helplessness that accompanies the process of a job search.19
In all of
these examples, social arrangements and social forces, or simple intersubjective relations
impact our sense of agency.
Weve come full circle now we can now see how the reflective considerations of the F-
and P-intentions, the pre-reflective action consciousness, as well as the non-conscious
processes of the M-intention, collude to produce the full variety of action-consciousness.
Weve also seen, through examining the interrelations of SA1 and SA2, that there are
inherent problems in an overreliance on boxologies of agency. The boxes drawn by
Pacherie et al all fit too neatly within the head either mind or brain and exclude out of
the box phenomena like social affordances. In most accounts of the comparator, while
marking off a box for sensory input is quite convenient, the approach excludes from the
debate a vast array of important considerations, these being primarily the specific relation
19 Another example of a social affordance or important contributor to SA not accounted for by
DTI or SA1; a Colleague recently related a situation his daughter, a peace-worker in station inSouth Africa, described, relating how indigenous locals refused the possibility that they might grow
their own sustainable gardens. They thought it was impossible for them to do so because they hadbecome convinced, under apartheid social structures, that they were lazy and therefore simply
could not do anything of the kind. They were content to conceive of things this way and to continue
to rely on government, which simply reinforced their sense of their own inability to create a gardenwithout state assistance.
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between a given prior intention and its bodily satisfaction, the institutions that support and
extend the limits of agency, and the interpersonal practices and social affordances that
represent agency directly in the world.
Although we may possess the appropriate prior-intentions to live well, and our actions can
be presumed to involve a sense of agency in so far as they generate motor efference, we
have shown that the summation of these elements does not necessarily account for a full
sense of agency. To the extent that our actions begin to lose immediate, interpersonal, and
societal satisfaction, our self-experience, both pre-reflectively and reflectively, begins to
break down. This insight reveals the full scope of the multi-faceted and dynamically
interrelated nature of our sense of agency.
SECTION2.1INCENTIVE-SALIENCEANDTHEWEAKNESSOFTHE WILL
Having made claims about this fuller scope of the sense of agency, involving
environmental and social aspects, based primarily on phenomenological analysis, in this
section I present empirical evidence in support of these claims. Returning to our
investigation of compulsive actions, we might ask what in the brain contributes to these
behaviors. As I have argued, we need not appeal to subpersonal drug-related
neuroadaptations to discover cases in which the relation between our prior intent and
embodied sense of agency conflict. Still, it makes for a fuller investigation if we turn to the
report of the established addict, who might commonly claim a loss of agency; it was the
drugs that made me do it. Clinical psychology recently provided an effective model of
addictive behaviors to guide us in our exploration of the sub-personal mechanisms
contributing to agency-loss.
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Recent PET and fMRI studies of addiction and drug-taking behavior have localized the
mechanism of IS to a neural network that overlaps with those implicated in studies of
intention and action; findings have correlated drug-craving with signal increases in the
nucleus accumbens region, parahippocampal, and lateral prefrontal cortices (Breiter et al.,
1997). Grant et al (1996) found correlations between self-reports of craving and activation
in the prefrontal cortex, amygdale, and cerebellum while Wang et al (1999) reported
similar correlations of self-reports with activation of the orbito-frontal cortex, insula, and
cerebellum. In a further study, researchers found that heroin-related cues activated regions
of the midbrain (periaqueductal grey and ventral tegmental) that consistently predicted
response to drug-related cues in the anterior cingulate, amygdala, and dorsolateral
prefrontal cortex (Sell et al., 1999). Importantly, the regions mediating IS are inscribed
within those that process action specification, executive control, and social cognition.
The IS model of compulsion can be further substantiated by recent empirical data
regarding the neurology of stress. Although early theorists largely assumed stress to be a
generalized flight-or-flight response to any aversive stimuli, a recent meta-analysis of 208
fMRI investigations of stress has overturned this hypothesis (Dickerson & Kemeny, 2004).
To briefly review, contemporary stress research indicates that in stressful situations, hyper-
activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis results in the release of the
hormone cortisol. Once in the blood, this powerful chemical results in a strong
physiological response (cold sweats, increased blood flow, increased blood pressure, etc)
and a direct, dynamic modulation of pre-frontal activations in the previously mentioned
brain regions (DLPFC, ACC, etc) leading to increased thoughts about the stressor that can
in turn further increase cortisol responding. These regions are also heavily implicated in
studies of self-agency (e.g. Frith, Decety, et al).
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Following their quantitative meta-analysis, these authors find that uncontrollable threats to
the goal of maintaining the social self trigger reliable and substantial cortisol changes
and that across studies, the factors of controllability and social evaluation interacted to
explain more than two-thirds of the empirical results (Dickerson & Kemeny, 2004).
Threats to the social self can thus be understood as threats to the salient environmental or
interpersonal factors of our agency, in terms of what I can control and how I expect others
to evaluate my actions. The point is that being with others, e.g. my drug-taking friends
leads to specific interpersonal stress, here clarified as an agency-loss related experience
(possible loss of control, pressure to use, etc.). The finding that primary factors driving
acute stress response relate to elements of controlling or maintaining a self in relation to
others supports my argument that interpersonal factors are heavily implicated in the sense
of agency. The agency loss of the drug taker or speed-dater might then be partially
accounted for by the acute stress response, which is essentially tied into external social
factors and supported by bodily-hormonal processes.
What can we conclude from this evidence? First, compulsive actions appear to depend in
part on neuronal processes mediating the phenomenal presentation of the environment to
the agent; as behaviors alter neurology, the phenomenal field is altered, and this alteration
in turn alters behavior and neural mechanisms in a reciprocal feedback loop