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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

Français

Often, by wanting to keep everything, one loses everything, and by being unwilling to part with false customs [...] one gives enemies the opportunity to shake the good [...] traditions.

c. 1552-1553

His knowledge and his courage were in this respect, above philosophy itself.

1580

One cannot analyze enthusiasm when one experiences it, since then one is not master of one's reflection.

1746

One found in his victories the end of his perils; while the other had, in victory itself, [...] a source of dangers.

100-120 AD

Victor Jean Nicolle

View of the Tiber

View of the Tiber

before 1789

The Evangelists, in their love for the truth, were not afraid to recount the facts that appeared most unfavorable to their Master.

1263-1264

There are no people more offended by wickedness than those who have never known what it costs to be good.

1759-1774

The necessary being and the being by its essence are but one and the same thing.

Late 17th - early 18th century

It is our will and pleasure that the lanterns at the corners and in the middle of the streets [...] be preserved there, as is customary.

1662

Villanovan

Bronze pendant in the form of a paired couple

Bronze pendant in the form of a paired couple

8th century BCE

Others hastily stitch together small accounts and small commentaries, from which they form a fabric full of inequalities.

1623

The desire for power is general; [...] if all men do not expose themselves to the same dangers, it is because the love of self-preservation is in balance with the love of power.

1772

This so-called virtue [humility] is only fit to degrade man, to debase him in his own eyes, to stifle in him all energy and all desire to be useful to society.

1766

We are sick of this modernity—sick of this unhealthy peace, of this cowardly compromise, of all this virtuous uncleanliness of the modern yes and no.

1888

Etruscan artist

Bronze helmet attachment

Bronze helmet attachment

late 6th century BCE

You are all, therefore, of the same opinion, and there is nothing to quarrel about.

1747

Of Essence and Quality.

c. 253-270 AD

There are then in the soul, it seems, false pleasures, which only ridiculously imitate the true ones [...].

c. 360 BC

The judge states the law, he does not pronounce penalties.

1893

Pieter de Hooch

Leisure Time in an Elegant Setting

Leisure Time in an Elegant Setting

ca. 1663–65

[...] the opinion in favour of the present system, which subordinates the weaker sex to the stronger, rests upon theory only; for there never has been trial made of any other, so that experience [...] cannot be pretended to have pronounced any verdict.

1869

What booklet [from a great mind], however small, does not contain some bright light, some general and fertile idea?

1864-1866

Thales [...] laid the foundations of philosophy in Greece.

45 BC

A long refutation in such matters is repugnant to the dignity of reason and leads to nothing.

1790

Roman Artist, Cypriot

Limestone cippus of Philon

Limestone cippus of Philon

ca. 2nd–3rd century CE

That our very existence implies a fault is proven by death.

1851

The fear shown by the new ministers in the face of the rebellious masses was such that any means seemed good to them, as long as it served to consolidate the shaken foundations of authority!

1851-1852

[...] violence and suspicion are things contrary to my nature.

1643-1649

There is a kind of contradiction between the two principles of human nature upon which religion is founded. Our natural terrors make us see a wicked deity [...]; our inclination to praise paints it as excellent and all-perfect.

1757

François Boucher

The Dispatch of the Messenger

The Dispatch of the Messenger

1765

Our soul will have cause to rejoice when, freed from the darkness in which it struggles, it can [...] be wholly filled with the great light.

63-64 AD

The evil is not in dying, but in dying shamefully.

c. 108 AD

A prodigious number of movements, and [...] an incredible quantity of intellectual operations of which we are not even conscious, are continually taking place within us.

1801

If [a prince] were ever attacked, the assailant would retreat in shame: for the things of this world are variable.

1513

Segna di Buonaventura

Madonna and Child with Nine Angels

Madonna and Child with Nine Angels

ca. 1315

Method to follow in the history of animals: one must begin with the study of man, who is the best known to us of all.

Mid-fourth century BC and 322 BC

If you make reason a prisoner under the domination of faith, why do you not place your own nature in the custody of Christian virtue?

1842-1845

order demanding that minds which have often thought of some object think of it again more easily, and have a clearer and more vivid idea of it than those who have thought little of it[...]

1674-1675

He who is truly obedient necessarily has true and salutary faith; for the spirit of obedience necessarily implies the spirit of faith.

1670

Fra Bartolomeo (Bartolomeo di Paolo del Fattorino)

Madonna and Child with the Young Saint John the Baptist

Madonna and Child with the Young Saint John the Baptist

ca. 1497

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

1746

The decisive test of a heroic heart is when it is free to take revenge on an enemy at will.

1636

Our senses, our faculties, and our organs are so arranged that they may serve us for the necessities of this life, and for what we have to do in this world.

1689

It is only with the help of reflection and study that we can manage to [...] subject the body to the empire of the mind, to lead the soul [...] to the knowledge of its duties and its end.

1750

Antoine Vollon

Still Life with Cheese

Still Life with Cheese

probably late 1870s

What we look at down here is not real, it is a stage set. What we eat is destroyed, is no longer real.

1947

Conceiving is a last resort in cases where one cannot perceive, and reasoning is only necessary insofar as one must fill the gaps in perception.

1911

To impose on the people what they please to call their experience, is that not worse than abandoning them to themselves?

4th century BC

The sun shines today also. [...] Let us demand our own works, and laws, and worship.

1836

Cypriot artist

Terracotta woman

Terracotta woman

ca. 600–480 BCE