| | Hi Matthew,
I'll rewrite. I wanted to test what I thought was your principle: We ought consider an entity any group 'deliberately and consciously set up by individuals for a specific purpose, with the full knowledge and consent of those individuals'. I wanted to apply this principle to the concepts of 'nation' and 'planned society'. I figured that under this principle you would not consider 'nation' an entity because it is not deliberately and consciously set up by the individuals for a specific purpose, and the individuals who are part of it lack full knowledge and consent. Because 'nation' is often an entity under the law, I asserted that if we revoke entity status for nations, we'll great affect today's law.
Next, I applied the principle to the concept of 'planned society' (I was actually thinking of planned communities here, like gated neighborhoods and such), and I figured that because they are deliberately and consciously set up by individuals for a specific purpose, with full knowledge and consent of those individuals, then planned communities should be granted entity status under the law. I hope that clarifies.
But you wrote:
Not necessarily everything "deliberately and consciously set up by individuals for a specific purpose and with the full knowledge and consent of those individuals", but many things, including corporations, should.
So I'm afraid I haven't identified the principle you'd use to determine what should and shouldn't be considered an entity. I want one overarching principle, one that says, 'a group of individuals should be considered an entity if...'
What other contexts do you have in mind? Well, I was really wondering whether the epistemic rules to concept-formation change when we're dealing with legal definitions. That is, I was wondering whether we should not consider corporations as entities outside the law, like in normal conversation.
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I see what appears to be a strong Pragmatic bent running through the posts of Andrew and Joe, and Jennifer earlier. It would seem they aren't so concerned with the consistency of treating a corporation as an entity, but rather with all the good fortunes that an entity status might bring. I'm not judging these good SOLOists, just pointing what appears to me an interesting pattern.
Jordan
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