WEH/Ethox Seminar: Distrust as a Defensive Stance
What does it mean to distrust a person or a group? Does it require that you believe that they bear you malice or are indifferent to your wellbeing? That you experience fear at the prospect of a compromising encounter? Is it a state of mind that involves closely monitoring and hatching contingency plans, or a behavioural disposition to avoid interaction, vulnerability, or reliance? Distrust comprises all these strands as well as others. I propose a theory of distrust that unites them. On this account distrust is a characteristically defensive stance taken toward another person or group on the basis of perceived ill will, moral indifference, incompetence, or lack of integrity. The constitutive aim of this stance is to shield the bearer from vulnerability, loss, and exploitation. This account – Distrust as a Defensive Stance – is uniquely equipped to explain distrust’s significance both for our moral relationships and for our epistemic agency.
This seminar will be held on Zoom, please register here: medsci.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJwsd—hrD8pGNWXJXVq8Z0ZF1HGlF0FIbmM
Date:
24 February 2021, 14:30 (Wednesday, 6th week, Hilary 2021)
Venue:
Venue to be announced
Speaker:
Professor Jason D'Cruz (State University of New York)
Organiser:
Christa Henrichs (Wellcome Centre for Ethics and Humanities)
Part of:
Wellcome Centre for Ethics and Humanities and Ethox Centre
Booking required?:
Not required
Audience:
Public
Editor:
Hannah Freeman