Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
Trust—or the belief that someone or something can be relied on to do what they say they will—is a key element of social relationships and a foundation for cooperation.
9 Οκτ 2018 · Trust is an abstract mental attitude toward a proposition that someone is dependable. Trust is a feeling of confidence and security that a partner cares. Trust is a complex neural process that...
4 Οκτ 2016 · When we don’t trust others, there’s often more to it: at heart, we have learned not to trust ourselves. The non-secure attachment styles are called anxious—which was mine—and avoidant.
Philosophical Psychology is dedicating this issue on trust and trustworthiness to Katherine Hawley (1971–2021) for two reasons. First, she was an expert in the area. Hawley was one of the most relevant voices in the philosophical debate on trust, distrust, trustworthiness, and untrustworthiness.
From these collective findings, we propose an elaborated, overarching descriptive theory of trust in which special note is taken of the theory’s application to the growing human need to trust in non-human entities.
According to this definition, trust is defined as “a psychological state comprising the intention to accept vulnerability based upon positive expectations of the intentions or behavior of another” (Rousseau et al., 1998, p. 395).
9 Δεκ 2021 · In this chapter, we first review major several theoretical accounts of interpersonal trust in the field of psychology and identify some of the key principles that provide an understanding of trust. We then describe a dyadic model of trust informed by these theories that integrates many of these principles.