Introduction: The Centrality of Trust in Moral and Social Life, by David Collins, Iris Vidmar Jovanović, and Mark Alfano
Part I: Theoretical Issues in the Moral Psychology of Trust
Chapter 1. Trust, Demographic Thresholds, and Cooperation in Social Evolution, by Charles Stanish
Chapter 2. A Phenomenological Analysis of Trust and Betrayal, by J. Keeping
Chapter 3. Trusting is Believing, by Miriam Schleifer McCormick
Chapter 4. Trusting Our Moral Intuitions, by Nenad Miščević
Chapter 5. On the Human Necessity of Trusting: A Case for Viewing Trust as a Neo-Aristotelian Virtue, by Tiger Ziyu Zheng
Chapter 6. Trust, Mistrust, and Autonomy, by Edward Hinchman and Andrea Westlund
Part II: Trust and Distrust in Conditions of Oppression
Chapter 7. Towards a Feminist Theory of Distrust, by Hale Demir-Doğuoğlu and Carolyn McLeod
Chapter 8. Self-Deception, Strategic Self-Distrust, and Oppression, by Jordan MacKenzie
Chapter 9. Dialogical Trust and Procedural Justice, by Natalie Stoljar
Part III: Trust in Organizations, Institutions, and Technology
Chapter 10. The Psychological Dynamics of Trust, With Applications to the Crisis of Trust in Organizations, by Marc A. Cohen
Chapter 11. Conspiracy Theories and Public Trust, by Brian L. Keeley
Chapter 12. Engineering Trustworthiness in the Online Environment, by Hugh Desmond
Chapter 13. OK, Google, Can I Trust You? An Anti-Trust Argument for Antitrust, by Trystan S. Goetze
Chapter 14. Institutional Trust in Medicine in the Age of Artificial Intelligence, by Michał Klincewicz
Part IV: Applied Issues of Interpersonal Trust
Chapter 15. Trusting at the End: Mosaic Trust and Dementia, by Em Walsh
Chapter 16. Trust, Attachment, and Monogamy, by Andrew Kirton and Natasha McKeever
Chapter 17. Trust in the Artist and the Audience: Aesthetic Virtue and the Hermeneutics of Faith, by David Collins and Iris Vidmar Jovanović