TY - CHAP A2 - Metzinger, Thomas K. A2 - Windt, Jennifer M. AB - What are intentions for? Do they have a primary purpose or function? If so, what is this function? I start with a discussion of three existing approaches to these questions. One account, associated with Michael Bratman's planning theory of agency, emphasizes the pragmatic functions of intentions: having the capacity to form intentions allows us to place our actions more firmly under the control of deliberation and to coordinate our actions over time. A second account, inspired by Elizabeth Anscombe's theory of intentions, emphasizes their epistemic function and their contribution to self-knowledge. A third account, developed by David Velleman, suggests instead that the capacity for intentions may be an accident or a spandrel, that is, a byproduct of some more general and fundamental endowments of human nature. I argue that these accounts are at best partial and largely overlook two important dimensions of intention. I introduce and motivate a further pragmatic function of intentions, namely their role in the control and monitoring of ongoing action and argue that acknowledging the existence and importance of this function allows us to plug gaps in these accounts. I further argue that this pragmatic function of intentions plays a crucial role in contexts of joint action where agents must align their representations in order to coordinate their actions towards a joint goal. I speculate that a capacity for conscious control might have become established because of the role it served in solving inter-agent coordination problems in social contexts and because of the benefit conferred by the forms of cooperation it thus made possible. AU - Pacherie, Elisabeth CY - Frankfurt am Main DO - 10.15502/9783958570122 KW - Action coordination, Conscious action control, Intention, Joint action, Planning, Representational alignment, Self-knowledge LA - English PB - MIND Group PY - 2015 SE - 29(T) SN - 9783958570122 ST - Conscious Intentions T2 - Open MIND TI - Conscious Intentions UR - https://open-mind.net/papers/conscious-intentions-the-social-creation-myth-2 ID - 29