Trust is understood in terms of a) acceptance of dependency in b) the absence of information about the other’s reliability in order to c) create an outcome otherwise unavailable. The first of these is the cost of trust; the second, the situation of uncertainty it faces and may overcome; the third, its purchase. This account permits: distinction between trust and similar relations with which it is frequently confused; discovery of the basis of trust in the emotional apprehension of confidence; and demonstration of the relationship between trust and both social capital and rationality, with counter-intuitive results
I argue to a conclusion I find at once surprising and intuitive: although many considerations show t...
Trust is a vital relationship concept that needs further conceptual analysis, not just empirical tes...
We believe that distrust can be as important as trust when agents are making a decision. An agent ma...
Trust is analyzed as a concept with two components, trustfulness and trustworthiness. This approach ...
Trust has been discussed in many social sciences including economics, psychology, and sociology. How...
The study of trust has occupied scholars from a number of disciplines, who have made limited attempt...
What is it to trust someone? What is it for someone to be trustworthy? These are the two main questi...
We will examine in this paper three crucial aspects of trust dynamics: a) How A’s trusting B and rel...
Trust is inherently related to risk, but for trust assessment to be integrated with the management o...
In this chapter, we argue that trust can be better understood in relation to people’s attempts to de...
Philosophical conceptions of the relationship between risk and trust may be divided into three main ...
Trust is a pervasive phenomenon in our lives. We trust our family members and lovers, our physicians...
Trust is a kind of risky reliance on another person. Social scientists have offered two basic accoun...
Recent economic conceptualizing of trust focuses of two distinct aspects of the notion. On the one s...
Trust is a pervasive phenomenon in our lives. We trust our family members and lovers, our physician...
I argue to a conclusion I find at once surprising and intuitive: although many considerations show t...
Trust is a vital relationship concept that needs further conceptual analysis, not just empirical tes...
We believe that distrust can be as important as trust when agents are making a decision. An agent ma...
Trust is analyzed as a concept with two components, trustfulness and trustworthiness. This approach ...
Trust has been discussed in many social sciences including economics, psychology, and sociology. How...
The study of trust has occupied scholars from a number of disciplines, who have made limited attempt...
What is it to trust someone? What is it for someone to be trustworthy? These are the two main questi...
We will examine in this paper three crucial aspects of trust dynamics: a) How A’s trusting B and rel...
Trust is inherently related to risk, but for trust assessment to be integrated with the management o...
In this chapter, we argue that trust can be better understood in relation to people’s attempts to de...
Philosophical conceptions of the relationship between risk and trust may be divided into three main ...
Trust is a pervasive phenomenon in our lives. We trust our family members and lovers, our physicians...
Trust is a kind of risky reliance on another person. Social scientists have offered two basic accoun...
Recent economic conceptualizing of trust focuses of two distinct aspects of the notion. On the one s...
Trust is a pervasive phenomenon in our lives. We trust our family members and lovers, our physician...
I argue to a conclusion I find at once surprising and intuitive: although many considerations show t...
Trust is a vital relationship concept that needs further conceptual analysis, not just empirical tes...
We believe that distrust can be as important as trust when agents are making a decision. An agent ma...