The volume considers the theories of the passions in Hobbes, Descartes
and Spinoza. Particular attention is given to the passion of fear,
highlighting how these three writers considered fear as both an
individual and a collective affect. Cerrato underlines the
characteristics, relevance and usefulness of these affects, together
with the strategies of control used to prevent their transformation into
passions that can inhibit rational action. He then demonstrates the
divergence of views between Descartes, Hobbes and Spinoza in terms of
how they delineate these conditions. The second part of the volume
focuses on analogies concerning rational strategies that a human being
can assume in order to manage fear. Together Descartes and Spinoza, it
is necessary to recall Hobbes's Leviathan, since this work is a
consistent and relevant source for Spinoza, as far as the conception of
fear as a peculiar perception of past and present is concerned.