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Resumen de Invoking fortuna and speculating on the future: Lotteries in the 15th and the 16th century countries

Jeroen Puttevils

  • Fiftteenth- and sixteenth-century loteries offer a unique insigh in the practices of forecasting and thinking about the future, intellectual historians (and sociologist who build further on these historians' work and have tied the modern perception of the future to the advent of capitalism) have argued that a modern understanding of the future as open and constructible only developed in the eighteenth century . However, their characterization of future thinking prior to that century is rather sketchy and based on socially biased sources. Through an analysis of the documents produced by Low Countries lottery entrepreneurs on the one hand and the poems by lottery tickets buyers this paper reconstructs the respective discourses of future-thinking by these diferent social groups. Lottery organizers clearly thought about the future, in secularized fashion and in a non-actuarial sense. Divine Providence is predominantly on the minds of the ticket buyers, or at least such ideas of providence are discursively reproduced


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