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Trust Methods: Accounting for Who, What, When, and How to Trust

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https://www.mpifg.de/1290169/2024-eyal
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Citation

Eyal, G. (2024). Trust Methods: Accounting for Who, What, When, and How to Trust. Talk presented at MPIfG Lecture. Köln. 2024-06-19.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0010-3D81-8
Abstract
What is trust and how should it be studied? In his talk, Gil Eyal argues against conventional approaches to studying trust in the social sciences and proposes an alternate strategy focused on “trust methods.” Instead of treating trust as a static property that can be measured by close-format survey questions, he conceptualizes trusting as a skillful act that is highly context-dependent and attuned to temporal variables such as speed, duration sequence, and timing. To illustrate this approach, Eyal draws on interviews with long Covid patients focusing on how they account for who, what, when, and how they distinguish responsible trust from blind faith.