On Gambling

Print edition: € 39.00

Sales Terms
About this book
  • DOI: 10.54179/2201
  • Published: 2022/3
  • Language: Latin text with facing English translation
  • Pages: 284
  • ISBN: 9789464447668
  • Specifications: LYNX, vol. 1 – Hardback, rounded spine, sewn, dust jacket, reading ribbon
Abstract

Pascasius Justus Turcq was born in the Flemish town of Eeklo. As a young man, he travelled through Spain before devoting himself to the study of philosophy and medicine in Italy. On gaining his doctorate, he returned north and settled in Bergen-op-Zoom, where he worked as a physician and eventually became the city’s mayor. He attended to William the Silent as one of the physicians who worked to save the Prince’s life after the assassination attempt of 1582.

Alongside tales of gambling princes and perceptive accounts of the mental suffering experienced by problem gamblers, Pascasius’ De alea is remarkable for its singular insights into 16th-century medical science.
Basing himself on the authority of the ancient, late-antique and mediaeval traditions, Pascasius first fuses discrete theoretical systems into an innovative framework, allowing him to propose a novel description of compulsive gambling as a psychological disorder. Secondly, Pascasius articulates a series of pioneering cures. He describes this therapy in cognitive terms reminiscent of approaches to non-substance addiction in use today.
On Gambling was routinely referenced in scholarship on gambling into the 18th century before disappearing almost entirely from view. Newly available here, with a critical Latin text and English translation, On Gambling epitomises the creative potential of 16th-century medical humanism.

Barton’s translation is clear, accurate and easy to read, and he has done a fine job of introducing Pascasius and editing his text. So too have the publishers: the book is a high quality production, a pleasure to handle and use, with footnotes at the bottom of each page (three cheers for that alone), including Pascasius’ own brief summaries of his argument at that point.Peter Jones, Classics for All.