2019
DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780198843900.001.0001
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How To Be Trustworthy

Abstract: The book articulates and defends a core notion of trustworthiness as avoiding unfulfilled commitments. This is motivated via accounts of both trust and distrust in terms of perceived commitment. Avoiding unfufilled commitments is crucial both to practical trustworthiness, and to trustworthiness in speech; on this picture, assertion involves promising to speak truthfully, and simultaneously either keeping that promise or breaking it. Both assertion and the incurring of practical commitments are governed by comp… Show more

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Cited by 85 publications
(46 citation statements)
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“…Jones (1996, p. 6) suggests the truster is optimistic as to the trustee's good will, whereas Hardin (2002, p. 1) holds that the truster regards the trustee has having encapsulated the truster's interests into her own. An alternate understanding is provided by Hawley (2019, p. 9), where reliance involves acting as if the trustee will meet some commitment. Normativity : This is the criterion that takes trust above mere reliance by including something which gives trust normative weight. This is often a kind of reflexivity condition where the truster's reliance provides the trustee with a direct and compelling (but not indefeasible) reason to meet that reliance (Jones, 2012).…”
Section: Establishing Art‐trustmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Jones (1996, p. 6) suggests the truster is optimistic as to the trustee's good will, whereas Hardin (2002, p. 1) holds that the truster regards the trustee has having encapsulated the truster's interests into her own. An alternate understanding is provided by Hawley (2019, p. 9), where reliance involves acting as if the trustee will meet some commitment. Normativity : This is the criterion that takes trust above mere reliance by including something which gives trust normative weight. This is often a kind of reflexivity condition where the truster's reliance provides the trustee with a direct and compelling (but not indefeasible) reason to meet that reliance (Jones, 2012).…”
Section: Establishing Art‐trustmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is often a kind of reflexivity condition where the truster's reliance provides the trustee with a direct and compelling (but not indefeasible) reason to meet that reliance (Jones, 2012). In contrast, Hawley (2019) holds trust to involve the belief that the trustee has a commitment, and it is that commitment which lends the trust its normative weight.…”
Section: Establishing Art‐trustmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Indeed, trust binds or makes firm our uncertain will to a certainty that we do not yet possess. It is a leap in the dark, the hope that someone's future behavior will be consistent with the expectations generated, even if we do not have absolute certainty (Hawley 2019). Trusting therefore implies freely accepting a risk that makes us vulnerable.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%