Mark G. Spencer

Mark G. Spencer (born 8 September 1967) is a Canadian historian and Professor of History at Brock University. He is known for his works on David Hume's life and thought. Spencer is a winner of Governor General's Gold Medal (The University of Western Ontario) and The John Bullen Prize of the Canadian Historical Association for his book David Hume and Eighteenth-Century America. He is co-editor with Elizabeth S. Radcliffe of Hume Studies.

Books

 * David Hume and Eighteenth-Century America (University of Rochester Press, 2005, reprinted 2010)
 * John Beale Bordley’s ‘Necessaries’: An American Enlightenment Pamphlet in its Historical Contexts (American Philosophical Society, 2020)

Edited

 * Hume’s Reception in Early America: Expanded Edition (New York, 2017)
 * The Bloomsbury Encyclopedia of the American Enlightenment, 2 vols (New York and London, 2015)
 * David Hume: Historical Thinker, Historical Writer (University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2013)
 * Ulster Presbyterians in the Atlantic World: Religion, Politics and Identity [with David A. Wilson] (Dublin, 2006)
 * Utilitarians and Their Critics in America, 1789-1914, 4 vols [with James E. Crimmins] (Bristol and London, 2005)
 * Hume’s Reception in Early America, 2 vols (Bristol, UK; originally distributed in North America by The University of Chicago Press, 2002)