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Friendship, Uncertainty, and "Commonplacing" in Renaissance Florence
2021
Journal of Interdisciplinary History
In fifteenth-century Florence, friendship—or the client–patron relationship, as contemporaries termed it—was often associated with uncertainties and risks. An investigation of diaries, notebooks, and letter correspondences of the time, from the perspective of game theory and decision theory, reveals how Florentines reasoned about the uncertainties of friendship, deploying an array of knowledge-constructing practices, under the rubric of "commonplacing," to understand it. The preventive
doi:10.1162/jinh_a_01662
fatcat:tfmyp2ezbvfglm6tqbp3ndyt5q