TY - UNPD A1 - Schidel, Regina T1 - Knowledge and trust : what we can learn from the debates about epistemic injustice N2 - My aim in this paper is to make the debates about epistemic injustice fruitful for an analysis of trust in the knowledge of others. Epistemic trust is understood here in a broad sense: not only as trust in scientific knowledge or expert knowledge, but also as trust in implicit, positioned and experience-based knowledge. Using insights from discussions of epistemic injustice, I argue for three interrelated theses: 1. Questions of epistemic trust and trustworthiness cannot be answered with reference to individual virtue alone; rather, they have a structural component. 2. The rationality of epistemic trust must be analyzed against the background of social structures and social relations of domination. 3. Epistemic trust is (also) a political phenomenon and epistemically just relations depend on political transformation processes that promote equality. T3 - ConTrust Working Paper Series - No. 7 KW - Trust KW - knowledge KW - epistemic trust KW - epistemic (in)justice KW - social epistemology Y1 - 2023 UR - http://publikationen.ub.uni-frankfurt.de/frontdoor/index/index/docId/73744 UR - https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:hebis:30:3-737446 PB - ConTrust - Trust in Conflict. Research Centre “Normative Orders” of Goethe University Frankfurt am Main CY - Frankfurt am Main ER -