Dear all,
we warmly invite you to the next APSE (Applied Philosophy of Science and
Epistemology) Talk and Reading Circle. The talk will be held by Maria
Baghramian (University College Dublin).
Talk:
When: Thursday, 12.06.2025, 15:00 - 17:00
Where: HS 3A, NIG (Universitätsstraße 7, 1010 Wien)
Title: Disagreement and Trust - the case from democracy and sconce
Abstract
Trust in democratic institutions has been in steep decline across many
western countries. Trust in science and scientists, at least in some
specific areas of science, has also come under question. It is widely
accepted that a certain level of public trust is essential to any
well-functioning democracy. Trust in science, in so far as scientific
findings have a role in the public life, is also crucial. A great deal
has been written about the so called "crisis of trust" in earth of these
domains. Less has been said about the connections and the structural
similarities or dissimilarities between the two.
This paper is an attempt to investigate the parallels between trust in
science and in democratic politics by focusing on the deep and at times
widespread disagreements present in both. I will argue that while
disagreement in both politics and science is necessary for their proper
functioning, certain types of disagreement can also lead to disfunction
and break down of trust. I follow a familiar distinction between
alethic, normative and identity based sources of disagreement using
recent work by Michael Lynch (2025) and Pippa Norris (2019) as my
examples of these differing approaches and argue that the corrosive type
of disagreement that leads to breakdown of trust should be understood in
terms of the commitments people have and develop in their lifetime
rather than their beliefs in truths or values. Commitments have
affective and conative features that are not always present in mere acts
of believing (See for instance Bernard Williams 1981 and Timothy
Scanlon, 1998). The connections between trust and commitments are also
stronger and deeper than those with beliefs (see for instance John
Holton, 1994). I conclude by auguring that a focus on disagreement
between commitments, both normative and alethic, could be a more
fruitful way of looking at the relationships between disagreement and
trust in politics and in science.
Bio
Professor Maria Baghramian is Full Professor of American Philosophy at
UCD School of Philosophy and a co-director of the UCD Post Graduate
Programme in Cognitive Science, which she co-founded in 2000. She has
held visiting posts in Harvard, MIT, University of Yerevan, Institut
Jean Nicod, Paris and in various universities in China. She was a
Fulbright Senior Scholar in Harvard in 2013. Baghramian was elected to
the Royal Irish Academy in 2010 and to its Council for two consecutive
terms. In June 2022 she was elected to the Academia Europaea (The
Academy of Europe). In 2022, she was Highly Commended in the Irish
Research Council Researcher of the Year Awards.
She is, with the astrophysicist Luke Drury, the Principal Investigator
of a research project on peer expert disagreement "When Experts
Disagree" (WEXD), funded by the Irish Research Council. Currently, she
is the coordinator and project leader of PERITIA - Policy, Expertise and
Trust in Action - a Horizon 2020 multi-disciplinary research project
funding of 3 million euro from the European Commission. In the European
arena, Baghramian been an active member of three working groups on
topics of truth, trust and science with the All European Academies
(ALLEA) and its science and policy mechanism SAPEA. Internationally, she
is a member of the steering committee of the International Federation of
Philosophical Societies, a member of the Programme Committee of the 2024
World Congress, and a member of the International Cooperation Committee
of the American Philosophical Association. She also has had numerous
academic engagements in China and Armenia.
Baghramian has also organised over 40 international conferences,
workshops and public lectures and is the founder and two term President
of the Society for Women in Philosophy in Ireland and representative of
Scholars at Risk programme. Baghramian has published extensively,
including 14 edited and authored books, on topics from epistemology and
contemporary American philosophy. She was also the editor of the
International Journal of Philosophical Studies (2004-14) and the
co-editor of Contemporary Pragmatism (2016-2021).
Reading Circle:
When: Thursday, 12.06.2025, 13:15 - 15:00
Where: HS 3A, NIG (Universitätsstraße 7, 1010 Wien)
We will focus our discussion on a forthcoming review article by Maria
Baghramian and Silvia Caprioglio Panizza (attached doc):
Baghramian, Maria and Silvia Caprioglio Panizza (forthcoming) "Expertise
and the Ethics of Trust: A Review" In: _ETICA Yearbook_.
Since the article is a review and a very good introduction to the topic,
I only suggest these two short papers as additional introduction:
Croce, M., & Baghramian, M. (2024). Experts - part I: What they are and
how to identify them. _Philosophy Compass_, e13009.
https://doi.org/10.1111/phc3.13009 [1]
Croce, M., & Baghramian, M. (2024). Experts--Part II: The sources of
epistemic authority. _Philosophy Compass_, e70005.
https://doi.org/10.1111/phc3.70005 [2]
For further reading regarding the topic:
Lynch, M. (2025). _On Truth in Politics: Why Democracy Demands It_.
Princeton: Princeton University Press.
https://doi-org.uaccess.univie.ac.at/10.1515/9780691231945
Hardwig, J. (1991). The role of trust in knowledge. _The Journal of
Philosophy_, _88_(12), 693-708.
Warren, M. E. (Ed.). (1999). _Democracy and Trust._Cambridge University
Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511659959
All the best,
Ella Berger and Vinzenz Fischer, on behalf of the APSE team
Links:
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[1]
https://doi.org/10.1111/phc3.13009
[2]
https://doi.org/10.1111/phc3.70005