STS Circle at Harvard
[image.png]
S.M. Amadae
Ohio State University, Political Science

on
Imagining the Neoliberal Subject: Nuclear Deterrence and the Prisoner's Dilemma

Monday, December 2
12:15-2:00 pm
Maxwell Dworkin, 33 Oxford Street, Room 119

[image.png]

Lunch is provided if you RSVP.
Please RSVP to 
sts<mailto:[email protected]>@hks.harvard.edu<mailto:[email protected]> 
by 5pm Wednesday, November 27.

Abstract: The first neoliberal subject, imagined using game theory, was the US 
Cold War national security state.  Defense intellectuals used rational 
deterrence theory to produce the confidence that thermonuclear weapons could 
provide security.  This incarnation of strategic rationality normalized 
hegemony, escalation dominance and coercive bargaining as the effective means 
to project American power.  By the 1970s, the strategic actor was adopted as 
the new subject of technoscientific governance.  This neoliberal agent, 
embroiled in the 2x2 matrix Prisoner’s Dilemma game, was used to model anarchy 
and the social contract.  Concurrent with elite skepticism about participatory 
democracy, trade unions, Keynesian economics, and public interest, game theory 
was used to envision a new world order.  Neoliberal capitalism substitutes 
winners and losers for the liberal reassurance that all will prosper; derives 
profit from arbitrage and risk management instead of production; and displaces 
a participatory public sphere with a civic epistemology of technocratic public 
policy.

Biography:  S.M. Amadae is an Assistant Professor in the Department of 
Political Science at the Ohio State University, and a Research Fellow in the 
Kennedy School of Government’s STS Program.  Amadae is the author of 
Rationalizing Capitalist Democracy:  The Cold War Origins of Rational Choice 
Liberalism, which won the American Political Science Association’s J. David 
Greenstone book award in Politics and History in 2004, and is completing 
Rationalizing Hegemony:  Game Theory and the Prisoner’s Dilemma Social Contract 
for Cambridge University Press.



A complete list of STS Circle at Harvard events can be found on our website:
http://www.hks.harvard.edu/sts/events/sts_circle/
Follow us on Facebook: STS@Harvard<http://www.facebook.com/HarvardSTS>




_______________________________________________


<<inline: image.png>>

_______________________________________________
Sci-tech-public mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/sci-tech-public

Reply via email to