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Finally, someone who lies "insincerely invokes trust" (Simpson 1992, 625).
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The interaction is based purely on "social navigation": every action must invoke trust or disdain, affection or enmity.
In a 2004 article, "Many Started Web Logs for Fun, but Bloggers Need Money, Too," Julie Flaherty interviewed bloggers who invoked "trust" and "personal integrity" in talking about the survival prospects of their medium.
According to Simpson, for example, Sarah would only be "pretending to invoke trust" (Simpson 1992, 628), and would not be invoking trust.
At no point is he invoking trust, and breaching that trust.
Paul Faulkner holds that lying necessarily involves telling someone something, which necessarily involves invoking trust.
If the person is "insincere in this" and actually does believe in the truth of what he states, despite invoking trust in his believing its opposite, then "this is a lie (an indirect lie, we might say)" (Simpson 1992, 630).
President Bush, former governor of Texas, the son of a former U.S. President and the grandson of a U.S. Senator, invoked a "trust we bear and pass along".
With regularity, she invokes the word "trust" when referring to Mr. Sanford.
Sanders's proposal to break up the big banks invokes the old trust-busting tradition of progressivism, and it has the support of some, although not all, academics.
Throughout the campaign, she tried to invoke the word "trust" with regularity, but remained vague on issues and scant on public appearances that were not heavily orchestrated.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com