Rethinking Uncertainty: Spinoza and Hume on Shaping Uncertain Secular Futures

This dissertation extends contemporary views about uncertainty. It does so through a reading of the role of uncertainty in the political thought of two modern philosophers, Baruch Spinoza and David Hume. Despite uncertainty's notable and multi-disciplinary appeal in the academic literature, th...

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Main Author: Vergaray, Alfonso Ruben
Other Authors: Political Science
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/70844
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-708442020-09-29T05:34:34Z Rethinking Uncertainty: Spinoza and Hume on Shaping Uncertain Secular Futures Vergaray, Alfonso Ruben Political Science Pitt, Joseph C. Schochet, Gordon Sax, Benjamin E. Luke, Timothy W. Roberts, Patrick S. Uncertainty Hume Spinoza This dissertation extends contemporary views about uncertainty. It does so through a reading of the role of uncertainty in the political thought of two modern philosophers, Baruch Spinoza and David Hume. Despite uncertainty's notable and multi-disciplinary appeal in the academic literature, the frame in which most scholars think about social and political uncertainty is one-sided. On the whole, contemporary scholars consider uncertainty as a problem in need of a remedy. In the social sciences uncertainty is transformed into risk in order to empirically calculate risk probabilities. The hope is that risks (uncertainties) can be controlled, reduced, and in all, mitigated. In this dissertation, I argue for a conceptual rethinking of uncertainty that expands its scope and reach to include a socially and politically beneficent understanding, a constructive form of uncertainty. In particular, I explore the ways social groups experience conditions of uncertainty in different contexts through an examination of what I term future-oriented and epistemic uncertainty in Hume and Spinoza's political thought. Spinoza's arguments for liberal democracy, and Hume's arguments favoring commercial society, are highlighted as instances of constructive uncertainty. The dissertation concludes by applying a general understanding of constructive uncertainty to the ideology of the American Dream in order to illustrate suggestively how a constructive conception of uncertainty might prove useful when critically engaging contemporary matters. Ph. D. 2016-04-23T06:00:15Z 2016-04-23T06:00:15Z 2014-10-30 Dissertation vt_gsexam:3932 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/70844 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Uncertainty
Hume
Spinoza
spellingShingle Uncertainty
Hume
Spinoza
Vergaray, Alfonso Ruben
Rethinking Uncertainty: Spinoza and Hume on Shaping Uncertain Secular Futures
description This dissertation extends contemporary views about uncertainty. It does so through a reading of the role of uncertainty in the political thought of two modern philosophers, Baruch Spinoza and David Hume. Despite uncertainty's notable and multi-disciplinary appeal in the academic literature, the frame in which most scholars think about social and political uncertainty is one-sided. On the whole, contemporary scholars consider uncertainty as a problem in need of a remedy. In the social sciences uncertainty is transformed into risk in order to empirically calculate risk probabilities. The hope is that risks (uncertainties) can be controlled, reduced, and in all, mitigated. In this dissertation, I argue for a conceptual rethinking of uncertainty that expands its scope and reach to include a socially and politically beneficent understanding, a constructive form of uncertainty. In particular, I explore the ways social groups experience conditions of uncertainty in different contexts through an examination of what I term future-oriented and epistemic uncertainty in Hume and Spinoza's political thought. Spinoza's arguments for liberal democracy, and Hume's arguments favoring commercial society, are highlighted as instances of constructive uncertainty. The dissertation concludes by applying a general understanding of constructive uncertainty to the ideology of the American Dream in order to illustrate suggestively how a constructive conception of uncertainty might prove useful when critically engaging contemporary matters. === Ph. D.
author2 Political Science
author_facet Political Science
Vergaray, Alfonso Ruben
author Vergaray, Alfonso Ruben
author_sort Vergaray, Alfonso Ruben
title Rethinking Uncertainty: Spinoza and Hume on Shaping Uncertain Secular Futures
title_short Rethinking Uncertainty: Spinoza and Hume on Shaping Uncertain Secular Futures
title_full Rethinking Uncertainty: Spinoza and Hume on Shaping Uncertain Secular Futures
title_fullStr Rethinking Uncertainty: Spinoza and Hume on Shaping Uncertain Secular Futures
title_full_unstemmed Rethinking Uncertainty: Spinoza and Hume on Shaping Uncertain Secular Futures
title_sort rethinking uncertainty: spinoza and hume on shaping uncertain secular futures
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/70844
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