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Trust in Epistemology
Section 1 The Value of Trust and Self-Trust
Locke on Trust
Epistemic and Practical Dependence and the Value of Skills or: Satnavs, Good or Bad?
Our Extensive Epistemic Dependence on Testimony and a Question It Makes Salient
The Nature of Our Epistemic Dependence on Testimony
One’s Choices Regarding Remaining Epistemically and Practically Dependent Versus Acquiring New Skills
Some Normative Principles Regarding Skills
Putting Aside Two Instrumental Reasons to Acquire Skills
Skills and Abilities
A Pleasure-Based Case for Certain-RAS, None for Unrestricted-RAS
A Well-Being-Based Case for Somc-RAS and Corc-RAS
Conclusion
Notes
References
Section 2 Trust in Testimony
The Role of Trust in Testimonial Knowledge
Some Categories for the Epistemology of Testimony
A General Framework for Understanding the Generation-Transmission Distinction15
Knowledge Transmission as Involving Joint Agency and Trust
Knowledge as Success From Ability
Back to the Main Arguments
Notes
References
Trust, Preemption, and Knowledge
Introduction
Preliminaries
The Task
Precaution and Preemption
The Central Challenge to Preemption
Forfeiting Doxastic Justification
Conclusions
Notes
References
Groups, Trust, and Testimony
Group Knowledge and Group Testimony
The Role of Trust in Testimony
Trusting Groups
Concluding (Metaphysical) Remarks
Notes
References
Section 3 Trust and Epistemic Responsibility
Reconciling Epistemic Trust and Responsibility
Epistemic Trust: General Accounts of Trust
Epistemic Trust: Two Forms
Inquiry and Testimony: Intersections of the Epistemic Trust Forms
Epistemic Responsibility: Responsibility for Beliefs
Epistemic Responsibility: Responsibility in Epistemic Conduct
The Implications of Epistemic Responsibility in Inquiry: A Matter of Knowing and Living Well
Epistemic Responsibility in a Social World of Trust Relations
Implications of Trust: Belief Formation and the Distribution of Epistemic Responsibilities
Implications of Trust: The Presumption of Trustworthiness Within Epistemic Practices
Implications of Trust: Responsibility as Critical Reflection on Our Practices
Conclusion
Notes
References
Proper Epistemic Trust as a Responsibilist Virtue
Epistemic Trust in General
Proper Epistemic Trust and the Structure of Responsibilist Virtues
Proper Epistemic Trust and the Meta-Epistemology of Virtues
Implications
Proper Epistemic Trust and Epistemological Issues
Conclusion
Notes
References
Virtuous and Vicious Intellectual Self-Trust
Intellectual Self-Trust
Virtuous and Vicious Types of Intellectual Self-Confidence
Secure, Defensive, and Damaged Self-Esteem
Self-Esteem as Underpinning Self-Confidence
Well-Placed and Ill-Founded Self-Trust
Notes
References
Section 4 The Vulnerabilities of Trust
Exploitative Epistemic Trust
Introduction
Exploitative Trust
Exploitation in Epistcmic-Trust Relationships
The Speaker Exploiting the Hearer
The Hearer Exploiting the Speaker
Conclusion
Notes
References
Self-Trust and Discriminatory Speech
Introduction
Self-Trust and Forms of Prejudicial Speech
Unconscious Influences
The Effects of Unconscious Influences on Intellectual Self-Trust
What’s a Liberal (or Anyone) to Do?
Notes
References
Contributors
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