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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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There is a double consequence [...]: when one proceeds by the position of the antecedent, and [...] when one proceeds by the destruction of the consequent.

c. 1270

One can say foolish things gravely and modestly, and impieties in a devout manner [...]. One must never be persuaded by manners [...], but only by the force of their reasons.

1674-1675

No dissension is so great or so dangerous as that which comes from religion: it separates citizens, neighbors, friends, relatives [...], it breaks alliances [...] and penetrates to the depths of hearts to [...] entrench irreconcilable hatreds.

c. 1552-1553

People are naturally inconsistent [...] things must therefore be arranged so that when they no longer believe, they can be made to believe by force.

1513

Etruscan artist

Bronze patera (salver)

Bronze patera (salver)

ca. 550 BCE

The deceased Sages [...], were they able to deposit their knack, their genius in their writings? If not, the books you read are [...] but the detritus of the ancients.

4th century BC

The course [of the blood] is nothing other than a perpetual circulation.

1637

If thoughts were realities, then everything one thinks would exist [...] which is obviously absurd.

c. 350 B.C.E.

This true method [...] would consist of two main things: [...] to use no term whose meaning has not first been clearly explained; [and] never to advance any proposition that is not demonstrated by truths already known.

circa 1658

Cypriot artist

Limestone inscribed box fragment

Limestone inscribed box fragment

3900 BCE - 100 CE

Fine manners [...] are more arbitrary and accidental things, but the merit of mature age is almost the same in every country; it consists above all in integrity, humanity, knowledge...

1751

Montesquieu claims that slavery owes its abolition to the Christian religion; this assertion is refuted.

1770

The arts must make some progress to pull us out of a crude life; and they must stop after some progress, to prevent us from falling into a soft life.

1776

It is universally admitted that partiality is incompatible with justice; preference given to one person over another, when there is no reason to prefer them, is unjust.

1861

Juan de Flandes

Saints Michael and Francis

Saints Michael and Francis

ca. 1505–9

Nature natured, to be well understood, requires a substance.

c. 1660

Do you always call this kind of endurance, this foolish endurance, a fine and good thing?

c. 380 BC

I have ordered myself to dare to say all that I dare to do, and I am displeased even by unpublishable thoughts.

1580

In Religion, [duties] are those which are founded on the relations that exist between men and their Priests. From which we see that it is up to the Priests alone to determine the duties of a good Christian.

1768

Roman Artist

Marble statuette of Aphrodite Anadyomene (rising)

Marble statuette of Aphrodite Anadyomene (rising)

1st century CE

The dogma of the Trinity therefore requires man to think the opposite of what he imagines and to imagine the opposite of what he thinks [...].

1841

What are desire and joy, if not a will that consents to what pleases us? And what are fear and sadness, if not a will that turns away from what displeases us?

c. 253-270 AD

The storm has passed, the work remains, and will remain forever, for the glory and justification of its illustrious author.

1758

The number of [rules with repressive sanctions] is smaller today than in the past, and [...] progressively decreases as societies approach our current type.

1893

Greek Artist, Attic

Upper part of the marble stele (grave marker) of Kallidemos

Upper part of the marble stele (grave marker) of Kallidemos

ca. 350–325 BCE

Manners spoil more easily than they are corrected.

1746

For this, it is not necessary that he be admired, it is enough that he be liked.

1835-1840

The great superiority of noble birth is that it allows one to bear poverty better.

1881

One must never separate [thought and expression]: separated, they fall to nothing, thought to banality, expression to nullity.

1926

Roman Artist

Marble portrait of a young woman

Marble portrait of a young woman

ca. 98–117 CE

Does one not lose all the time that could be better spent? Ah! If one can live a thousand years in a quarter of an hour, what is the point of sadly counting the days one has lived?

1761

It is certain that nothing is rarer among human writings than a history that is well-made and accomplished in all its points.

1623

It is impossible for men ever to search accurately for [...] the agreement [...] of Ideas, while their thoughts only roll [...] upon sounds of doubtful and uncertain meaning.

1689

True mysticism is exceptional. But when it speaks, there is, in the depths of most men, something that imperceptibly echoes it.

1932

Roman Artist

Marble portrait of the emperor Caracalla

Marble portrait of the emperor Caracalla

212–217 CE

When [our judgments] are flawed, it is always because of their relationship with previous judgments.

1805

The errors of our time are Christianity without the supernatural.

1947

Children must, from the most tender age, be sensitive to glory, be saddened by reprimands, and take pride in praise.

100-120 AD

it follows that, apart from man, there would be nothing substantial in the visible world, because substantial unity requires a being that is [...] indivisible, and naturally indestructible [...].

1686

Etruscan artist

Bronze bowl from a thymiaterion (incense burner)

Bronze bowl from a thymiaterion (incense burner)

late 4th century BCE

There is a pomp of grief more demanding than grief itself: how few men are sad for themselves alone!

63-64 AD

My goal is that my will shall be in harmony with nature.

c. 108 AD

The dilettante considers the thing as an end; the professional, only as a means. [...] It is from such men, and not from mercenaries, that the greatest things have always come.

1905

I drove out kings; you bring in tyrants. I gave you liberty [...]; you, who now possess it, do not want to keep it.

86-82 BC

Cypriot artist

Limestone strainer

Limestone strainer

3900 BCE - 100 CE

I love him... as one should... not too strongly... sensibly.

1749

In this struggle — a veritable civil war — all the elements necessary for a coming battle unite and develop. Once it has reached this point, association takes on a political character.

1847

The mind thinks and arranges at little cost what costs the heart infinitely to implement.

1636

When the thinking man has succeeded in overcoming the inclinations that pushed him to vice [...], he finds himself in a state of inner peace [...] where virtue is its own reward.

1797-1798

Cornelis de Vos

Portrait of a Young Woman

Portrait of a Young Woman

1603