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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter Oldenbourg May 14, 2016

Trust, Reliance and the Internet

  • Philip Pettit
From the journal Analyse & Kritik

Abstract

Trusting someone in an intuitive, rich sense of the term involves not just relying on that person, but manifesting reliance on them in the expectation that this manifestation of reliance will increase their reason and motive to prove reliable. Can trust between people be formed on the basis of Internet contact alone? Forming the required expectation in regard to another person, and so trusting them on some matter, may be due to believing that they are trustworthy; to believing that they seek es teem and will be rationally responsive to the good opinion communicated or promised by an act of trust; or to both factors at once. Neither mechanism can rationally command confidence, however, in the case where people are related only via the Internet. On the Internet everyone wears the ring of Gyges; everyone is invisible, in their personal identity, to others.

Published Online: 2016-05-14
Published in Print: 2004-05-01

© 2004 by Lucius & Lucius, Stuttgart

Downloaded on 1.5.2024 from https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/auk-2004-0106/html
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