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Telepresence and trust: A speech-act theory of mediated communication
- Source :
- Philosophy and Technology. 30(4)
- Publication Year :
- 2016
-
Abstract
- Trust is central to our social lives in both epistemic and practical ways. Often, it is rational only given evidence for trustworthiness, and with that evidence is made available by communication. New technologies are changing our practices of communication, enabling increasing rich and diverse ways of ‘being there’, but at a distance. This paper asks: how does telepresent communication support evidence-constrained trust? In answering it, I reply to the leading pessimists about the possibility of the digital mediation of trust, Philip Pettit and Hubert Dreyfus. I also rebut Media Richness Theory, which proposes a linear relationship between the volume of mediated information and the quality of communication. Positively, I develop a speech-act theory of digitally mediated communication, drawing on Austen’s identification of the illocutionary act. The choice of a particular technology of communication constitutes part of what is communicated, including a setting of the social ‘frame’, and thus the possibilities for trust to be sustained or eroded. How something is said is part of what it is that is said.
- Subjects :
- media_common.quotation_subject
Mediated communication
06 humanities and the arts
02 engineering and technology
Media richness theory
0603 philosophy, ethics and religion
Epistemology
Philosophy
Identification (information)
History and Philosophy of Science
020204 information systems
060302 philosophy
Mediation
0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering
Illocutionary act
Quality (business)
Sociology
Computer-mediated communication
Philosophy of technology
media_common
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 22105441 and 22105433
- Volume :
- 30
- Issue :
- 4
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Philosophy and Technology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....d4d1f1bacc5e6065d80df3e252b5e678