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Trust without shared belief: Pluralist realism and polar bear conservation
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Peer Reviewed
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Author (aut): Fellows, Jennifer J.
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Abstract |
Abstract
Trust-building has implicitly been characterized in epistemology as necessitating the adoption of shared belief. If this is so, such models of trust-building appear at odds with a metaphysical commitment to pluralist realism. In this article I offer the first steps in modeling how a pluralist realist might understand trust building. I argue that entertaining pluralist realism as a possibility may actually be more fruitful for trust building than a monist conception because each side is given an important concession: the possibility that their knowledge claims might be correct. The case of polar bear conservation in the Canadian arctic illustrates that trust-building without shared belief is possible. I wish the members of these round-table discussions success in the future. |
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Volume 25, Issue 1
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Physical Description Note
PUBLISHED
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DOI |
DOI
10.1162/POSC_a_00234
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Use and Reproduction |
Use and Reproduction
©2017 by The Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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Rights Statement
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Keywords |
Keywords
Inuit
trust
environment
polar bear
Indigenous knowledge
pluralist realism
social epistemology
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English
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Trust without shared belief: Pluralist realism and polar bear conservation
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application/pdf
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236287
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