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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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The first [way] consists in a mutual influence; the second is to assign a skilled craftsman to them who adjusts them [...] at all times; the third is to manufacture them with such art and precision that one can be assured of their agreement.

1696

Thus he is always divided and contrary to himself.

1670

Only things related to inspiration are nourished by delay. Those related to natural duty, to the will, cannot suffer delay.

1947

As long as you worry and trouble yourself about it, can you believe yourself sufficiently convinced of the true goods and the true evils?

c. 108 AD

Roman Artist

Bronze jug

Bronze jug

ca. 1st century BCE–1st century CE

We blush to learn wisdom; but [...] we must not expect such a great good to fall into our hands by chance.

63-64 AD

Disorders of the imagination are extremely contagious, and [...] slip and spread into most minds with great ease.

1674-1675

Man in the State [...] has entirely renounced his wild, lawless freedom in order to find his freedom in general, intact, in a lawful dependency, that is, in a juridical state.

1797

The great cities are teeming with people whom misery has made industrious.

1748

Greek Artist, Laconian

Lead figure of a woman

Lead figure of a woman

late 7th–early 6th century BCE

The food that would satisfy a dwarf [...] would only whet the appetite of a giant.

1636

One must, if possible, resort to the law [...], but if violence annihilates the courts, all that remains is to repress audacity with courage [...] and force with force.

September 57 BC

It is society that has provided the canvas on which logical thought has worked.

1912

What is useful to the public is hardly ever introduced except by force, given that private interests [...] are almost always opposed to it.

1762

Alfred Sisley

Allée of Chestnut Trees

Allée of Chestnut Trees

1878

The more incredible and dissonant a divine mystery is, the more honor one gives to God in believing it, and the more glorious is the victory of faith.

1623

The heaviest penalty for declining to rule is to be ruled by someone inferior to yourself.

c. 375 BC

It is by no means a question of discovering what being is endowed with this sensibility, nor what is its nature, its beginning, its end, or its ultimate destination.

1817

That no use can be made of them is perhaps the very essence of greatness.

1888

Italic

Statue of a man

Statue of a man

6th century BCE or later

One finds in it at the same time much wit and little freedom of mind.

1835-1840

God placed the soul in the world so that, seeing the evils of which matter is the principle, it might return to the Father and be forever freed from such contagion.

c. 253-270 AD

No one wants to be pitied for their mistakes.

1747

Men are funny: when no one comes quickly enough to steal their freedom, they steal it themselves.

1926

Gabriel Max

The Last Token: A Christian Martyr

The Last Token: A Christian Martyr

1860

The contradiction in the existence of God.

1841

[It is] the era when all citizens fall under the dependence of merchants, and when things begin to have a value assessed by a common measure.

1776

Whoever conceives the divine nature only in a confused way does not see that to exist belongs to the nature of God.

1670

If the worker resisted this reduction of his relative wage, he would only be trying to get a share in the increased productivity of his own labor.

1865

Greek Artist

Bronze bull

Bronze bull

late 5th–early 4th century BCE

One does not realize the vitality of institutions that place right on the side of force; one does not know with what tenacity people cling to them.

1869

As for the pain, I do not take it into account at all; for it is so short.

1643-1649

It is possible at the same time for the like to be increased by the like, and, in another sense, for it to be by the unlike.

c. 350 B.C.E.

Jesus Christ was not king of Israel to impose tributes, to raise and arm troops, but to govern souls and lead them into the kingdom of heaven.

1263-1264

Greek Artist, South Italian, Tarentine

Terracotta head of a youth

Terracotta head of a youth

4th century BCE

Alas, poor man! You have enough inconveniences that you are forced to endure, without increasing them still more by your own inventions!

1580

If I have voluntarily braved so many dangers [...] it was so that every citizen would have the freedom to uphold the laws.

100-120 AD

The same desire for gain which at first constituted [a nation's] strength and power thus becomes the cause of its ruin.

1772

Death is a crisis — in the strongest sense of the word — a final judgment.

1836

Jean-Baptiste Jacques Augustin

Portrait of a Woman with Tapestry Work

Portrait of a Woman with Tapestry Work

1800

Did I need you to teach me that the body my parents gave me is well-made? Do you think your compliments affect me, when I know you will denigrate me elsewhere more than you have flattered me here?

4th century BC

All prediction is in reality a vision.

1889

God having given man an understanding to direct his actions, has also granted him a freedom of will and liberty of acting.

1690

Montaigne's younger brother [...] later married La Boétie's stepdaughter.

c. 1552-1553

Cypriot artist

Gold pendant in the form of a lion's head

Gold pendant in the form of a lion's head

2nd half of the 5th century BCE

[Some authors] give no other answer to their critics than public approval.

1717

there is always some evil so closely linked to the good that it seems impossible to enjoy one without suffering the drawbacks of the other.

1855

When men depart from the maxims of reason to embrace [...] an artificial life, no one can answer for what will please or displease them.

1751

Under a God who has revealed himself only to confound human reason, everything must be incomprehensible, everything must defy common sense.

1766

Davide Ghirlandaio (David Bigordi)

The Marriage of the Virgin

The Marriage of the Virgin

ca. 1479