Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Trust, Ethics and Human Reason

View through CrossRef
The central aims of this book are (1) to present an overview of the philosophical debate on trust in the last three decades; (2) to address a central issue in that debate, namely, the presumed prima facie conflict between trust and rationality; and (3) in the course of the analysis, to apply a non-essentialist understanding of psychological concepts, as developed in Wittgenstein’s philosophical psychology. The task is not to judge between different definitions of trust. Instead we need awareness of what is implied in a given case when behaviour is singled out as an instance of trust. To invoke the vocabulary of trust and distrust in human interaction is both to describe it, to take a certain perspective on it and to influence it. This is also true in the philosophical debate itself. The issue of trust has been taken up in response to various theoretical conundrums. A dominant theme is the need to refute scepticism and show why trust can be embraced as a rationally justified pursuit. The author argues that this approach must in the end be self-refuting because it would lose the phenomenon it wants to justify. What emerges is instead a conception of rationality that includes the entire web of practices and ways of thinking that constitute human agency, including our ways of speaking about them. We are always already embedded in relations of dependence, we are ethically committed to each other as beings that trust and receive trust.
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Title: Trust, Ethics and Human Reason
Description:
The central aims of this book are (1) to present an overview of the philosophical debate on trust in the last three decades; (2) to address a central issue in that debate, namely, the presumed prima facie conflict between trust and rationality; and (3) in the course of the analysis, to apply a non-essentialist understanding of psychological concepts, as developed in Wittgenstein’s philosophical psychology.
The task is not to judge between different definitions of trust.
Instead we need awareness of what is implied in a given case when behaviour is singled out as an instance of trust.
To invoke the vocabulary of trust and distrust in human interaction is both to describe it, to take a certain perspective on it and to influence it.
This is also true in the philosophical debate itself.
The issue of trust has been taken up in response to various theoretical conundrums.
A dominant theme is the need to refute scepticism and show why trust can be embraced as a rationally justified pursuit.
The author argues that this approach must in the end be self-refuting because it would lose the phenomenon it wants to justify.
What emerges is instead a conception of rationality that includes the entire web of practices and ways of thinking that constitute human agency, including our ways of speaking about them.
We are always already embedded in relations of dependence, we are ethically committed to each other as beings that trust and receive trust.

Related Results

Ethics of Caring in Environmental Ethics
Ethics of Caring in Environmental Ethics
Indigenous ethics and feminist care ethics offer a range of related ideas and tools for environmental ethics. These ethics delve into deep connections and moral commitments between...
Trust Rules
Trust Rules
Trust is at the root of all positive relationships. This accessible and empowering book teaches how to form an inner circle of trusted confidants in your workplace and at home that...
Practical Truth
Practical Truth
Abstract Aristotle argues that the actions central to human flourishing are those that involve reason. But reason manifests itself in a human life in more than one w...
Nursing Ethics
Nursing Ethics
Abstract This edited volume comprises 19 original essays in nursing ethics by an international, interdisciplinary group of scholars, researchers, and clinicians. The...
Refuting Peter Singer's Ethical Theory
Refuting Peter Singer's Ethical Theory
Krantz provides a defense of traditional, human-centered ethics against Peter Singer's ethical theory. Singer favors a Copernican revolution in ethics because he thinks our traditi...
Japan's Engineering Ethics and Western Culture
Japan's Engineering Ethics and Western Culture
Given that engineering significantly affects modern society, ensuring its reliability is essential. How then should society implement engineering ethics to ensure its reliability? ...
Fundamentals of ethics
Fundamentals of ethics
The textbook provides a detailed presentation of the main problems of morality, analyzes the ethical views of prominent moral theorists from antiquity to the present day, tells abo...
Trust within Learning
Trust within Learning
Trust within Learning provides invaluable insight into the learning relationship between students and teachers, a complex and dynamic area of research. It achieves this aim by reim...

Back to Top