Abstract
It is often said that successful scientific research must be built on trust. Focusing on the alleged necessity of trust for successful scientific communication and thus for scientific cooperation (which underlies much of contemporary science), I argue that science mustn't be built on trust. Appearances to the contrary come from a failure to distinguish different attitudes toward scientists' testimony, in particular trusting and relying on other scientists. This article proposes an account of scientific reliance and explains how it differs from scientific trust; it also shows why this distinction matters for science.
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CITATION STYLE
Machery, E. (2025). Science Without Trust? Philosophy of Science. https://doi.org/10.1017/psa.2025.10143
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