This article analyses the extent to which expert authorities have basic communicative obligations to be open, honest, and transparent, with a view to shaping strategies of public engagement with such authorities. This article is in part a response to epistemic paternalists such as Stephen John, who argue that the communicative obligations of expert authorities, such as scientists, permit the use of lying, or lack of openness and transparency, as a means of sustaining public trust in scientific authority. In this article, I elucidate John’s position and reject it. I argue that expert authorities have strong communicative obligations to be open, honest, and transparent, which are grounded in the insight that such authorities hold positions of...
In this paper I aim to consider some aspects of the system of communications within which expertise ...
The success of public health responses to the COVID-19 pandemic is sensitive to public trust in expe...
This chapter discusses the topics of trust and expertise from the perspective of political epistemol...
This article analyses the extent to which expert authorities have basic communicative obligations to...
This article discusses the conditions under which the use of expert knowledge may provide an adequat...
In our highly complex world, we confront fields of knowledge in which we must depend upon others wit...
It is commonly claimed that scientists should hold certain communicative virtues, such as sincerity,...
Expert-informed public policy often depends on a certain level of public trust in the relevant exper...
This article examines the role of expertise in public debate, specifically the ways in which experti...
Collins and Evans's Third Way of Social Studies of Science is an ambitious attempt to counteract the...
Under what conditions is it legitimate to accept some claim on the basis of authority—in particular,...
This is a pre-print of an article published in Synthese. The final authenticated version is availabl...
Faced with current urgent calls for more trust in experts, especially in high impact and politically...
English abstract: In order for experts to serve as authorities in our society, people need to trust ...
Democratic societies are rife with talk of trust in institutions such as governments, banks, news ag...
In this paper I aim to consider some aspects of the system of communications within which expertise ...
The success of public health responses to the COVID-19 pandemic is sensitive to public trust in expe...
This chapter discusses the topics of trust and expertise from the perspective of political epistemol...
This article analyses the extent to which expert authorities have basic communicative obligations to...
This article discusses the conditions under which the use of expert knowledge may provide an adequat...
In our highly complex world, we confront fields of knowledge in which we must depend upon others wit...
It is commonly claimed that scientists should hold certain communicative virtues, such as sincerity,...
Expert-informed public policy often depends on a certain level of public trust in the relevant exper...
This article examines the role of expertise in public debate, specifically the ways in which experti...
Collins and Evans's Third Way of Social Studies of Science is an ambitious attempt to counteract the...
Under what conditions is it legitimate to accept some claim on the basis of authority—in particular,...
This is a pre-print of an article published in Synthese. The final authenticated version is availabl...
Faced with current urgent calls for more trust in experts, especially in high impact and politically...
English abstract: In order for experts to serve as authorities in our society, people need to trust ...
Democratic societies are rife with talk of trust in institutions such as governments, banks, news ag...
In this paper I aim to consider some aspects of the system of communications within which expertise ...
The success of public health responses to the COVID-19 pandemic is sensitive to public trust in expe...
This chapter discusses the topics of trust and expertise from the perspective of political epistemol...