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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

Français

In a homogeneous mass, [...] nothing could give birth to the idea of time; duration only begins with a certain variety of effects.

1890

Pulverize jade and pearls, and there will be no more thieves. Burn the contracts, break the seals, and men will become honest again.

4th century BC

One should not, in order to populate some provinces more and enrich them, turn others into deserts, or leave behind only a miserable people.

1776

If he slackens or stiffens too much, [the leader] ceases to be a king [...]; he becomes a flatterer or a despot, and draws upon himself their hatred or contempt.

100-120 AD

Master called Pseudo-Pier Francesco Fiorentino

Madonna and Child with the Infant Saint John the Baptist and Angels

Madonna and Child with the Infant Saint John the Baptist and Angels

1460

It is you who are being judged, rather than I.

c. 108 AD

As soon as a woman is pleasing, she is in her place everywhere.

1926

Wealth should not give rise to pride, nor to idleness; it should only be an instrument in the service of virtue.

c. 387 BC

[Humanity is a] virtue of profane morality, which it is necessary to stifle when one wants to be a good Christian; it almost never accords with the interests of the Divinity.

1768

Master of Flora

The Birth of Cupid

The Birth of Cupid

1550

[Philosophy] shows what to practice or to flee, it sits at the helm and directs our agitated course through the reefs.

63-64 AD

You are not capable of receiving the Holy Spirit as long as you continue to know Jesus Christ only according to the flesh.

1263-1264

When, in a painful and dreadful dream, anguish reaches its peak, it awakens us [...]. The same thing happens in the dream of life, when supreme anxiety pushes us to break its thread.

1851

The totality of beliefs and sentiments common to the average members of a society forms a determinate system with a life of its own; it can be called the collective or common conscience.

1893

Greek Artist, Cypriot

Terracotta head of a woman

Terracotta head of a woman

late 4th–early 3rd century BCE

Truth exists for us, and we are capable of reaching it with certainty. [We must know] the means that lead us to it, and the causes that lead us away from it.

1805

You are astonished that God made man so limited, so ignorant, so unhappy. Why are you not astonished that He did not make him more limited, more ignorant, and more unhappy?

1733

If I am pressed to say why I loved him, I feel that it cannot be expressed except by answering: 'Because it was he, because it was I.'

1580

One must not regard an idea as chimerical and dismiss it as a beautiful dream, just because obstacles prevent its realization.

1797-1798

Cypriot artist

Chlorite pestle

Chlorite pestle

ca. 1600–1050 BCE

All good maxims are in the world, [...] one only has to apply them; but that is very difficult.

1746

Temperation is the mutual and corresponding extension of two or more bodies, with their qualities also remaining.

c. 253-270 AD

In these unfortunate times, they dare not raise their own voices to denounce the crime. [...] they remain silent, frightened by the danger.

79 BC

Mercy, rarely used and with judgment, is a beautiful and singular virtue in a prince; but ordinary clemency without distinction [...] is the complete subversion of all order.

c. 1552-1553

Roman Artist

Marble cinerary chest with lid

Marble cinerary chest with lid

ca. 20–30 CE

Wherever a single [entity] holds power, the good of others is cared for only to the extent that this good may be useful to the one that is master.

1677

And so that this may be a firm and stable matter for all time, we have had our seal affixed to these presents.

1662

The two main pitfalls of heroism are unbridled anger and unrestrained greed: that is where reputation commonly runs aground.

1636

Among a [democratic] people, seriousness is no longer peculiar to certain men; it becomes a national habit.

1835-1840

Cypriot artist

Limestone statuette of a female votary

Limestone statuette of a female votary

3900 BCE - 100 CE

There is nothing so unjust as the complaints of those who want to know everything and want to apply themselves to nothing. They [...] want to be moved always, and for their senses and passions to be incessantly flattered.

1674-1675

Civilized man himself, if he is no longer restrained by this fear, becomes cruel and barbaric.

1772

[So that a fable], like a single and whole living creature, [...] produces a pleasure that is proper to it.

c. 335 BC

The idea that the world is a great machine that moves without God's intervention [...] introduces materialism and fatalism.

1715-1716

Cypriot artist

Standing female figurine

Standing female figurine

ca. 600–480 BCE

Classical paganism was characterized by unity; dualism, division, disagreement in all things are the character of Christianity.

1842-1845

One only hears these words: So-and-so is dead, so-and-so is sick; this one has fled, that one is shut up at home; [...] there are some of whom we have no news.

1527

If women do not complain about the power of husbands, each one complains about her own husband, or the husbands of her friends. It is the same in all other forms of servitude [...].

1869

The play of all human passions offers [...] lessons to whoever wants to study history to know oneself and become wise at the expense of the dead.

1762

Cypriot artist

Shield bearer

Shield bearer

ca. 600–480 BCE

I fear that what I have put [...] may be more doubtful & more obscure.

1643-1649

The bourgeois republic signifies the unlimited despotism of one class over other classes.

1851/1852

The proper aim and ultimate end of true philosophy is to reign over all beings, over natural bodies, over remedies, over machines [...].

1609

Following the opinions of other men is a great source of error.

1689

Christian Wilhelm Ernst Dietrich

Surprised, or Infidelity Found Out

Surprised, or Infidelity Found Out

1732

The imperative 'become hard!', the fundamental certainty that all creators are hard, this is the true distinctive sign of a Dionysian nature.

1888

The author and the publisher are two players in a game: if the latter pays as he wishes, on the other hand he does not know what he is buying.

1741-1784

The cause of wrong readings: public opinion, passions.

1947

Why should the idea of human fragility [...] trouble your most delicious hours? Why should this fatal poison corrupt pleasures at their very source...?

1742

Camille Pissarro

The Public Garden at Pontoise

The Public Garden at Pontoise

1874