Collective Action: Difference between revisions

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BloomWiki: Collective Action
 
BloomWiki: Collective Action
 
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{{BloomIntro}}
{{BloomIntro}}
Collective Action is the "Study of the Group"—the investigation of how "Individuals" can "Work Together" to achieve "Goals" that "No One" could achieve alone. While "Action Theory" (see Articles 531–534) focuses on the "Single Person," **Collective Action** focuses on "Teams," "Nations," and "Species." From the "Prisoner's Dilemma" (the 'Temptation to Cheat') to the "Tragedy of the Commons" and the "Logic of Coordination," this field explores the "Geometry of Cooperation." It is the science of "Synergy," explaining why it is so "Hard" for humans to "Save the Climate" or "Pay for a Public Park," even when we all "Want" the same outcome.
Collective Action is the "Study of the Group"—the investigation of how "Individuals" can "Work Together" to achieve "Goals" that "No One" could achieve alone. While "Action Theory" (see Articles 531–534) focuses on the "Single Person," **Collective Action** focuses on "Teams," "Nations," and "Species." From the "Prisoner's Dilemma" (the 'Temptation to Cheat') to the "Tragedy of the Commons" and the "Logic of Coordination," this field explores the "Geometry of Cooperation." It is the science of "Synergy," explaining why it is so "Hard" for humans to "Save the Climate" or "Pay for a Public Park," even when we all "Want" the same outcome.
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== Remembering ==
__TOC__
 
<div style="background-color: #000080; color: #FFFFFF; padding: 20px; border-radius: 8px; margin-bottom: 15px;">
== <span style="color: #FFFFFF;">Remembering</span> ==
* '''Collective Action''' — Action taken together by a "Group of people" whose "Goal" is to "Enhance their condition" and achieve a "Common Objective."
* '''Collective Action''' — Action taken together by a "Group of people" whose "Goal" is to "Enhance their condition" and achieve a "Common Objective."
* '''The Tragedy of the Commons''' (Hardin) — The idea that "Everyone" will "Over-use" a "Shared Resource" (like a 'Pasture' or 'The Atmosphere') for "Individual Gain," eventually "Destroying it" for everyone.
* '''The Tragedy of the Commons''' (Hardin) — The idea that "Everyone" will "Over-use" a "Shared Resource" (like a 'Pasture' or 'The Atmosphere') for "Individual Gain," eventually "Destroying it" for everyone.
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* '''Public Good''' — A "Benefit" that is "Non-excludable" (you can't stop people from using it) and "Non-rivalrous" (my use doesn't stop your use).
* '''Public Good''' — A "Benefit" that is "Non-excludable" (you can't stop people from using it) and "Non-rivalrous" (my use doesn't stop your use).
* '''Institution''' — A "Set of Rules" or "Habits" created to "Solve" collective action problems (e.g., 'The Law,' 'A Contract,' 'A Social Club').
* '''Institution''' — A "Set of Rules" or "Habits" created to "Solve" collective action problems (e.g., 'The Law,' 'A Contract,' 'A Social Club').
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== Understanding ==
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== <span style="color: #FFFFFF;">Understanding</span> ==
Collective action is understood through '''Dilemmas''' and '''Alignment'''.
Collective action is understood through '''Dilemmas''' and '''Alignment'''.


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'''The 'Montreal Protocol' (1987)'''': The most "Successful" collective action in history. The "Whole World" "Agreed" to "Stop using CFCs" to "Save the Ozone Layer." It proved that if the "Goal is Clear" and the "Cost is Shared," humans **Can** act as a "Global Species."
'''The 'Montreal Protocol' (1987)'''': The most "Successful" collective action in history. The "Whole World" "Agreed" to "Stop using CFCs" to "Save the Ozone Layer." It proved that if the "Goal is Clear" and the "Cost is Shared," humans **Can** act as a "Global Species."
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== Applying ==
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== <span style="color: #FFFFFF;">Applying</span> ==
'''Modeling 'The Cooperation Threshold' (Predicting if a group will 'Succeed'):'''
'''Modeling 'The Cooperation Threshold' (Predicting if a group will 'Succeed'):'''
<syntaxhighlight lang="python">
<syntaxhighlight lang="python">
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: '''Wikipedia''' → The ultimate "Anti-Tragedy." A "Global Resource" that "Anyone can edit" but "Doesn't get destroyed" because the "Culture of Cooperation" is stronger than the "Vandals."
: '''Wikipedia''' → The ultimate "Anti-Tragedy." A "Global Resource" that "Anyone can edit" but "Doesn't get destroyed" because the "Culture of Cooperation" is stronger than the "Vandals."
: '''Climate Change''' (See Article 530) → The "Final Boss" of collective action. A "Global Commons" with "7 Billion Free-Riders."
: '''Climate Change''' (See Article 530) → The "Final Boss" of collective action. A "Global Commons" with "7 Billion Free-Riders."
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== Analyzing ==
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== <span style="color: #FFFFFF;">Analyzing</span> ==
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|+ Prisoner's Dilemma Outcomes
|+ Prisoner's Dilemma Outcomes
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'''The Concept of "Focal Points" (Schelling Points)''': Analyzing "Silent Coordination." If you are told to "Meet a Friend in New York" but "Not told a time or place," where do you go? Most people go to **"Grand Central Station at Noon."** These "Obvious Points" are the "Automatic Institutions" that allow humans to "Coordinate" without "Talking."
'''The Concept of "Focal Points" (Schelling Points)''': Analyzing "Silent Coordination." If you are told to "Meet a Friend in New York" but "Not told a time or place," where do you go? Most people go to **"Grand Central Station at Noon."** These "Obvious Points" are the "Automatic Institutions" that allow humans to "Coordinate" without "Talking."
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== Evaluating ==
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== <span style="color: #FFFFFF;">Evaluating</span> ==
Evaluating collective action:
Evaluating collective action:
# '''Scale''': Why does "Trust" "Break down" when a group is "Larger than 150 people" (Dunbar's Number)?
# '''Scale''': Why does "Trust" "Break down" when a group is "Larger than 150 people" (Dunbar's Number)?
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# '''Digital Commons''': Does the "Internet" make collective action "Easier" (Speed) or "Harder" (Anonymity/Misinformation)?
# '''Digital Commons''': Does the "Internet" make collective action "Easier" (Speed) or "Harder" (Anonymity/Misinformation)?
# '''Leadership''': Do we "Need" a "Single Leader" to "Force Alignment," or can "Groups" be "Self-Organizing"?
# '''Leadership''': Do we "Need" a "Single Leader" to "Force Alignment," or can "Groups" be "Self-Organizing"?
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== Creating ==
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== <span style="color: #FFFFFF;">Creating</span> ==
Future Frontiers:
Future Frontiers:
# '''DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organizations)''': Using "Smart Contracts" to "Automate Cooperation," where "Funds" are "Released" only when "Everyone has Done their part."
# '''DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organizations)''': Using "Smart Contracts" to "Automate Cooperation," where "Funds" are "Released" only when "Everyone has Done their part."
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[[Category:Action Theory]]
[[Category:Action Theory]]
[[Category:Game Theory]]
[[Category:Game Theory]]
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Latest revision as of 01:48, 25 April 2026

How to read this page: This article maps the topic from beginner to expert across six levels � Remembering, Understanding, Applying, Analyzing, Evaluating, and Creating. Scan the headings to see the full scope, then read from wherever your knowledge starts to feel uncertain. Learn more about how BloomWiki works ?

Collective Action is the "Study of the Group"—the investigation of how "Individuals" can "Work Together" to achieve "Goals" that "No One" could achieve alone. While "Action Theory" (see Articles 531–534) focuses on the "Single Person," **Collective Action** focuses on "Teams," "Nations," and "Species." From the "Prisoner's Dilemma" (the 'Temptation to Cheat') to the "Tragedy of the Commons" and the "Logic of Coordination," this field explores the "Geometry of Cooperation." It is the science of "Synergy," explaining why it is so "Hard" for humans to "Save the Climate" or "Pay for a Public Park," even when we all "Want" the same outcome.

Remembering[edit]

  • Collective Action — Action taken together by a "Group of people" whose "Goal" is to "Enhance their condition" and achieve a "Common Objective."
  • The Tragedy of the Commons (Hardin) — The idea that "Everyone" will "Over-use" a "Shared Resource" (like a 'Pasture' or 'The Atmosphere') for "Individual Gain," eventually "Destroying it" for everyone.
  • The Prisoner’s Dilemma — A "Game Theory" scenario where "Two People" would "Both Benefit" from "Cooperating," but the "Incentive" to "Cheat" leads them to "Both Lose."
  • The Free-Rider Problem — When someone "Enjoys the Benefit" of a group action (e.g., 'Clean Air' or 'National Defense') but "Doesn't Pay the Cost" (e.g., 'Not paying taxes').
  • Coordination Problem — When people "Want" to act together but "Don't know how" to "Sync" their actions (e.g., 'Which side of the road to drive on?').
  • Collective Intentionality (Searle/Tuomela) — The "Special State" of a "Group Mind": when we think **"WE are doing X"** rather than 'I am doing X and you are doing X.'
  • Olson’s Logic (Mancur Olson) — The theory that "Large Groups" are "Harder to Organize" than "Small Groups" because of "Anonymity" and "Free-Riding."
  • Social Capital — The "Trust," "Networks," and "Shared Norms" that make "Collective Action" easier in a community.
  • Public Good — A "Benefit" that is "Non-excludable" (you can't stop people from using it) and "Non-rivalrous" (my use doesn't stop your use).
  • Institution — A "Set of Rules" or "Habits" created to "Solve" collective action problems (e.g., 'The Law,' 'A Contract,' 'A Social Club').

Understanding[edit]

Collective action is understood through Dilemmas and Alignment.

1. The "Rational" Selfishness (The Dilemma): Why is the "Whole" sometimes "Less" than the "Sum of Parts"?

  • Imagine a **Lake** with "100 Fishermen."
  • If they all "Take a little," the fish "Reproduce" and everyone is rich forever.
  • But **Individual Logic** says: "If I take an **Extra Fish**, I get **$10**. The damage to the lake is only **$0.10** per person."
  • Everyone "Thinks the Same."
  • The lake "Dies."
  • This is the "Tragedy." "Individual Rationality" leads to "Collective Disaster."

2. The "Sync" (Coordination): Sometimes we "Agree" on the goal, but we "Fail" at the **How**.

  • Imagine "1,000 People" who want to "Overthrow a Dictator."
  • If they all "Go to the Square at 9:00 AM," they "Win."
  • If only "50 People" go, they "Go to Jail."
  • Every person is "Waiting" to see if "Everyone else" goes.
  • This is the **Common Knowledge** problem. "I will go only if I KNOW that YOU know that I KNOW we are all going."

3. The "We-Mode" (Collective Intent): How do "Teams" work?

  • John Searle argued that "Collective Action" is a "New Type" of mind.
  • When "Two People" "Carry a Table," they aren't "Two individuals."
  • They are a **"We-Agent."**
  • They "Synchronize" their "Movements" and "Intentions."
  • This "Social Glue" is what allowed humans to "Build Pyramids," "Hunt Mammoths," and "Go to the Moon."

The 'Montreal Protocol' (1987)': The most "Successful" collective action in history. The "Whole World" "Agreed" to "Stop using CFCs" to "Save the Ozone Layer." It proved that if the "Goal is Clear" and the "Cost is Shared," humans **Can** act as a "Global Species."

Applying[edit]

Modeling 'The Cooperation Threshold' (Predicting if a group will 'Succeed'): <syntaxhighlight lang="python"> def will_the_group_act(group_size, benefit_per_person, cost_per_person, trust_level_pct):

   """
   Collective Action = (Benefit / Cost) * Trust.
   Large groups have 'Free-Rider' friction.
   """
   friction = group_size * 0.01 # More people = More 'Invisible' free-riders
   
   potential = (benefit_per_person / cost_per_person) * (trust_level_pct / 100)
   final_score = potential - friction
   
   if final_score > 1.0:
       return f"RESULT: SUCCESS. The group has 'Alignment'. Force: {round(final_score, 2)}"
   else:
       return f"RESULT: FAILURE. Free-riding or Lack of Trust. Force: {round(final_score, 2)}"
  1. Case: 10 people in a clean-up club (High Trust)

print(will_the_group_act(10, 100, 20, 90))

  1. Case: 1 million people trying to save the climate (Low Trust)

print(will_the_group_act(1000000, 1000, 100, 10)) </syntaxhighlight>

Collective Landmarks
Elinor Ostrom’s 'Governing the Commons' → She "Won the Nobel Prize" for "Proving" that "Local Communities" can "Manage the Commons" without 'Government' or 'Private Property' if they have "Good Rules" and "High Trust."
The 'Arab Spring' (2011) → How "Social Media" "Solved the Coordination Problem" by making "Protest Times" "Common Knowledge" instantly.
Wikipedia → The ultimate "Anti-Tragedy." A "Global Resource" that "Anyone can edit" but "Doesn't get destroyed" because the "Culture of Cooperation" is stronger than the "Vandals."
Climate Change (See Article 530) → The "Final Boss" of collective action. A "Global Commons" with "7 Billion Free-Riders."

Analyzing[edit]

Prisoner's Dilemma Outcomes
Agent A Agent B Result
Cooperate Cooperate **BEST FOR BOTH** (3 points each)
Cheat Cooperate **BEST FOR A** (5 points) / **WORST FOR B** (0)
Cooperate Cheat **WORST FOR A** (0) / **BEST FOR B** (5)
Cheat Cheat **BAD FOR BOTH** (1 point each)
Analogy A 'Joint Venture' A 'Betrayal' A 'Mutual Destruction'

The Concept of "Focal Points" (Schelling Points): Analyzing "Silent Coordination." If you are told to "Meet a Friend in New York" but "Not told a time or place," where do you go? Most people go to **"Grand Central Station at Noon."** These "Obvious Points" are the "Automatic Institutions" that allow humans to "Coordinate" without "Talking."

Evaluating[edit]

Evaluating collective action:

  1. Scale: Why does "Trust" "Break down" when a group is "Larger than 150 people" (Dunbar's Number)?
  2. Enforcement: Is "Punishment" (e.g. 'Shaming' or 'Fines') "Necessary" for "Cooperation"?
  3. Digital Commons: Does the "Internet" make collective action "Easier" (Speed) or "Harder" (Anonymity/Misinformation)?
  4. Leadership: Do we "Need" a "Single Leader" to "Force Alignment," or can "Groups" be "Self-Organizing"?

Creating[edit]

Future Frontiers:

  1. DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organizations): Using "Smart Contracts" to "Automate Cooperation," where "Funds" are "Released" only when "Everyone has Done their part."
  2. Global 'Trust' Networks: A "Blockchain of Reputation" that "Shows" how "Cooperative" someone is, reducing the "Incentive to Cheat" in global trade.
  3. AI 'Coordination' Oracles: An AI that "Finds the Focal Point" for "Conflict Resolution," suggesting a "Middle Ground" that "Both Sides" can "Agree on" instantly.
  4. Hyper-Local 'Resilience' Circles: Small, high-trust "Groups" that "Share Everything" (Tools/Food/Cars), proving that the "Commons" can be "Saved" one neighborhood at a time.