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    A motive that is self-interested cannot simultaneously be... — Carmelics
    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Challenges→Consciously using people's need for esteem as a reason for trusting them is incompatible with actually trusting them.

    A motive that is self-interested cannot simultaneously be the motive required by motives-based trust.

    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics
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    Moral ResponsibilityVirtue Ethics

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    Consciously using people's need for esteem as a reason for trusting them is inco...Deliberately leveraging another person's esteem-seeking behavior to get what one...Trust, on a motives-based account, requires a motive other than self-interest.

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    Trust, on a motives-based account, requires a motive other than self-i...87%Deliberately leveraging another person's esteem-seeking behavior to ge...85%An action motivated by genuine concern for others cannot be explained ...80%Self-interest cannot serve as the natural, non-moral motive for just a...79%

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    Such an epistemology is also open to criticisms, however. For example, it suggests that rational trust will always be partial rather than complete, given that the rational trustor is open to evidence that contradicts their trust on this theory, while someone who trusts completely in someone else lacks such openness. The theory also implies that the reasons for trusting well (i.e., in a justified way) are accessible to the trustor, at some point or another, which may simply be false. Some reasons

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