On Telling and Trusting

Mind 116 (464):875-902 (2007)
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Abstract

A key debate in the epistemology of testimony concerns when it is reasonable to acquire belief through accepting what a speaker says. This debate has been largely understood as the debate over how much, or little, assessment and monitoring an audience must engage in. When it is understood in this way the debate simply ignores the relationship speaker and audience can have. Interlocutors rarely adopt the detached approach to communication implied by talk of assessment and monitoring. Audiences trust speakers to be truthful and demonstrate certain reactive attitudes if they are not. Trust and the accompanying willingness to these reactive attitudes can then provide speakers with a reason to be trustworthy. So through ignoring interlocutors' engagement with the communicative process, the existing debate misses the possibility that it is an audience's trusting a speaker that makes it reasonable for the audience to accept what the speaker says

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Paul Faulkner
University of Sheffield

Citations of this work

Trust as an unquestioning attitude.C. Thi Nguyen - 2022 - Oxford Studies in Epistemology 7:214-244.
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References found in this work

Testimony: a philosophical study.C. A. J. Coady - 1992 - New York: Oxford University Press.
Trust and antitrust.Annette Baier - 1986 - Ethics 96 (2):231-260.
Content preservation.Tyler Burge - 1993 - Philosophical Review 102 (4):457-488.
Convention: A Philosophical Study.David Lewis - 1969 - Synthese 26 (1):153-157.

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