Description

Book Synopsis

What is the importance of trust for human social life? What role does trust play in morality, in political arrangements, and in our attempts to gain knowledge and understand the world? When should we trust others, and when is withholding trust or mistrusting others warranted? While philosophers have recently turned their attention to such questions, they have generally overlooked what important thinkers throughout the history of philosophy have said on the topic of trust. Edited by David Collins, Iris Vidmar Jovanović, and Mark Alfano, Perspectives on Trust in the History of Philosophy brings together examinations of the views on trust that can be found in several major philosophers, from the ancient world up to the twentieth century and from across the globe. With a focus on the moral and social dimensions of trust, this collection includes perspectives from Chinese, Indian, and African philosophies, and the contributors examine how thinkers such as Confucius, Aristotle, Hobbes, Hume, Smith, Kant, Nietzsche, Løgstrup, and Murdoch have thought about trust and trustworthiness. This book demonstrates that good philosophical work on trust must be historically informed.



Table of Contents

Introduction

David Collins

Chapter 1. A Confucian Account of Trustworthiness

Winnie Sung

Chapter 2. Aristotle on Friendship and Trust

Corinne Gartner and Wania Ahmad

Chapter 3. How the Buddha Earns his Disciples’ Trust (According to Some Pāli Nikāya Texts)

Antoine Panaïoti

Chapter 4. Mutual Trust and the Foundations of African Communalism

Polycarp Ikuenobe

Chapter 5. Credulity, Diffidence, and Civil Trust in Hobbes

Erfan Xia

Chapter 6. David Hume and Adam Smith on the Nature and Functions of Trust and Trustworthiness

Christel Fricke

Chapter 7. The Obligation to be Trustworthy and the Ability to Trust: An Investigation into Kant’s Scattered Remarks on Trust

Esther Oluffa Pedersen

Chapter 8. Nietzsche on Trust and Mistrust

Mark Alfano

Chapter 9. Løgstrup and the Sovereignty of Trust

Patrick Stokes

Chapter 10. Iris Murdoch: Trust in the World

Silvia Panizza

Perspectives on Trust in the History of

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    A Hardback by David Collins, Iris Vidmar Jovanovic, Mark Alfano

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      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 20/11/2023
      ISBN13: 9781666931075, 978-1666931075
      ISBN10: 1666931071

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      What is the importance of trust for human social life? What role does trust play in morality, in political arrangements, and in our attempts to gain knowledge and understand the world? When should we trust others, and when is withholding trust or mistrusting others warranted? While philosophers have recently turned their attention to such questions, they have generally overlooked what important thinkers throughout the history of philosophy have said on the topic of trust. Edited by David Collins, Iris Vidmar Jovanović, and Mark Alfano, Perspectives on Trust in the History of Philosophy brings together examinations of the views on trust that can be found in several major philosophers, from the ancient world up to the twentieth century and from across the globe. With a focus on the moral and social dimensions of trust, this collection includes perspectives from Chinese, Indian, and African philosophies, and the contributors examine how thinkers such as Confucius, Aristotle, Hobbes, Hume, Smith, Kant, Nietzsche, Løgstrup, and Murdoch have thought about trust and trustworthiness. This book demonstrates that good philosophical work on trust must be historically informed.



      Table of Contents

      Introduction

      David Collins

      Chapter 1. A Confucian Account of Trustworthiness

      Winnie Sung

      Chapter 2. Aristotle on Friendship and Trust

      Corinne Gartner and Wania Ahmad

      Chapter 3. How the Buddha Earns his Disciples’ Trust (According to Some Pāli Nikāya Texts)

      Antoine Panaïoti

      Chapter 4. Mutual Trust and the Foundations of African Communalism

      Polycarp Ikuenobe

      Chapter 5. Credulity, Diffidence, and Civil Trust in Hobbes

      Erfan Xia

      Chapter 6. David Hume and Adam Smith on the Nature and Functions of Trust and Trustworthiness

      Christel Fricke

      Chapter 7. The Obligation to be Trustworthy and the Ability to Trust: An Investigation into Kant’s Scattered Remarks on Trust

      Esther Oluffa Pedersen

      Chapter 8. Nietzsche on Trust and Mistrust

      Mark Alfano

      Chapter 9. Løgstrup and the Sovereignty of Trust

      Patrick Stokes

      Chapter 10. Iris Murdoch: Trust in the World

      Silvia Panizza

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