“…For the latter task, one might go beyond ExM and ExE debates and look into the growing body of work in social ontology and social cognition research. Here, we find resources to clarify the sense in which collective emotions involve a single, token‐identical phenomenal subject of those emotions, that is, some identification or fusion of emotional episodes of individuals—or, rather, the maintenance of a self/other‐differentiation (Huebner, ; Helm, , ; Salmela, , ; Schmid, ; Szanto, ; Zahavi, a, 2015b; Salmela & Nagatsu, ; Szanto, forthcoming‐a; Szanto, forthcoming‐b; León, Szanto, and Zahavi, forthcoming). Indeed, one of the central assumptions underlying skepticism regarding collective extensions of emotions is that either there is some ineffable phenomenal core to emotional experiences that is “non‐transferable” from one subject to another or else that they must fuse into one token‐identical emotional episode.…”