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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

Français

If one wishes to learn something new, one must resort to intuition, as the truly rich and fertile source of our knowledge.

1819

Think rather that if life flees, if youth is but a flower that soon withers, we must all the more seize the moment when we possess it [...] & not lose any particle of such a fleeting existence.

1742

If you can, do.

1741-1784

[...] men, in seeking to shield themselves from fear, immediately begin to make themselves feared.

1513-1519

Master of the Codex Rossiano

The Trinity in an Initial B

The Trinity in an Initial B

Probably 1387

The perpetual struggle waged [within the artist] between intelligence and sensitivity [...] can yield the most beautiful, most living works.

1926

If all individuals [...] are equally protected today, this softening of morals is due not to the appearance of a new penal rule, but to the extension of an old one.

1893

Freedom [...] admits of degrees.

1889

Do you not find, then, that I have prepared [for life] my entire life?

c. 108 AD

Greek Artist, South Italian, Tarentine

Fragment of a terracotta relief of a woman and child

Fragment of a terracotta relief of a woman and child

mid-4th century BCE

If [a person] retained no memory of their modifications, each time they would believe they were feeling for the first time: entire years would be lost in each present moment.

1754

Do not wait for the day when [sorrow] leaves you against your will: be the first to leave it.

37 AD - 41 AD

He placed his glory and his patriotism in preventing, by his presence, [his city] from diminishing further, and in allowing his fellow citizens to enjoy the esteem attached to his name.

100-120 AD

We claim only the role of a guide, which is certainly not to aim for great authority, and which implies more good fortune than talent and superiority.

1620

Jean-Baptiste Perronneau

Olivier Journu (1724–1783)

Olivier Journu (1724–1783)

1756

It is solely a matter here of observing our sensibility, its acts, that is to say its different modes, which constitute our different ways of existing.

1817

That which particularly afflicts common men, should serve as a consolation [to a stronger mind].

1643-1649

I find it better to sacrifice vain applause [...] for the truer satisfaction that comes from perceiving the regular chain of things, when one sees physical analogies concur [...] to bring physical truths to light.

1755

[Faith] condemns as heretics [...] only those who teach opinions capable of leading to rebellion, hatred, disputes, and anger.

1670

Cypriot artist

Terracotta male head

Terracotta male head

5th century BCE

The contradiction in the existence of God.

1841

The source of our passions, [...] the only one that is born with man and never leaves him as long as he lives, is self-love.

1762

Extraordinary actions can only come from a heart that is also extraordinary.

1636

Youth is brave, but intemperate.

329-323 BC

James Nixon

Portrait of a Woman

Portrait of a Woman

ca. 1790

Truly foolish is the one who tires their mind and wears out their body to reach such an end.

4th century BC

While others buy the objects of their pleasures at great expense [...], I procure for myself, without spending anything, the pleasures of the soul, which are purer [...].

4th century BC

I was full of the memories of M. de Chateaubriand and Cooper, and I expected to see [...] savages on whose faces nature would have left the trace of some of those haughty virtues that the spirit of freedom engenders.

1864-1866

The contemplation of the One is that supreme revelation of the mysteries that the hierophant alone sees in the sanctuary and can only communicate to the initiated.

c. 253-270 AD

Johannes Lingelbach

Peasants Dancing

Peasants Dancing

1651

I prefer to discover a single new etiology than to obtain the crown of the king of Persia!

1841

The more ancient the abuse, the more sacred it is.

1769

The materialist method, this instrument bequeathed to us by Marx, is a virgin instrument; no Marxist has ever truly used it, starting with Marx himself.

1934

It is religion that hatched despots and tyrants; they made bad laws; their example corrupted the great; the great corrupted the people; and the debased people became wretched slaves.

1766

Cypriot artist

Standing tambourine player

Standing tambourine player

ca. 600–480 BCE

The love of power and the love of liberty are in an eternal antagonism. Where liberty is less, the passion for power is more ardent and more shameless.

1869

To redeem what is past, and to transform every 'it was' into 'thus I willed it!' — that alone I would call redemption!

1883-1885

When one has found the truth, one must stand firm in it; since curiosity is given to us only to lead us to discover it.

1674-1675

Which of his readers does he not send away with a calmer heart! Can one, overwhelmed with sadness, pick up one of his books and not feel cheerfulness reborn?

45 BC

Nicolaes Eliasz Pickenoy

Man with a Celestial Globe

Man with a Celestial Globe

1624

[...] I do not doubt at all that one can deduce, from self-evident Propositions [...] the true measures of Right and Wrong by consequences [...] as incontestable as those used in Mathematics.

1689

The subject is well worth the trouble of reading it.

1574

It is a demonstration, but an imperfect one, which requires or presupposes a truth that still deserves to be demonstrated.

Late 17th - early 18th century

I become imbued with a disease to which I give my particular attention, and I catch its seed.

1580

Rembrandt (Rembrandt van Rijn)

Portrait of a Young Woman with a Fan

Portrait of a Young Woman with a Fan

1633

Nature has provided other animals with clothing and weapons. [...] For man, [...] it has given him intelligence and hands, so that he could provide himself with what is necessary.

c. 1270

...saving, in other things, our right and that of others in all matters.

1662

There are neither talents, nor wisdom, nor solid pleasures in the heart of error.

1746

History is but a fable agreed upon.

1758

Angelica Kauffmann

Edward Smith Stanley (1752–1834), Twelfth Earl of Derby, Elizabeth, Countess of Derby (Lady Elizabeth Hamilton, 1753–1797), and Their Son (Edward Smith Stanley, 1775–1851)

Edward Smith Stanley (1752–1834), Twelfth Earl of Derby, Elizabeth, Countess of Derby (Lady Elizabeth Hamilton, 1753–1797), and Their Son (Edward Smith Stanley, 1775–1851)

ca. 1776