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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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There is no surer guard for a leader than the firm and sincere affection of those under him; for when the people [...] have become accustomed not to fear the one who commands them, but to fear for him, then all ears, all eyes are open to watch over his safety.

100-120 AD

The square of Siena is the most beautiful to be seen in any city in Italy.

1774

Although a passion, for being secret, is no less a passion, [...] it matters greatly to know how to make a mystery of it.

1636

Is not wounded vanity the mother of all tragedies? But where pride is wounded, something better than it grows.

1883-1885

Jan Mostaert

Christ Shown to the People

Christ Shown to the People

1510–15

When men wish to solve riddles [...], their haste and impatience cause them to miss the solution.

1609

The mind must judge all things according to its inner lights, without listening to the false and confused testimony of its senses and its imagination.

1674-1675

The entire body is equally liquid, and sometimes it becomes entirely hard and solidifies.

c. 350 B.C.E.

Oh, nothingness of human greatness! Oh, fragility of life! Are these the vain advantages for which, ever biased, we consume ourselves with toil?

1746

Cypriot artist

Limestone strainer

Limestone strainer

3900 BCE - 100 CE

What man has the right to demand happiness on an earth where almost everyone exhausts themselves merely reducing their miseries?

1926

He who possesses enough has obtained what no rich man has ever reached: the end of desire.

63-64 AD

It is therefore evident that there is nothing universal but names.

1772

For one who has done beautiful things, it is also beautiful to hear them spoken of.

c. 387 BC

Roman Artist

Marble two-sided relief

Marble two-sided relief

1st century CE

Individuality encompasses the infinite, and only one who is capable of comprehending it can have knowledge of the principle of individuation.

1704

It would be vain to turn away from the past to think only of the future. [...] The opposition between the future and the past is absurd.

1943

It is generally admitted that it is just for a person to receive (good or evil) what they deserve, and unjust for them to receive the good or suffer the evil they do not deserve.

1861

[The] contracting parties would be between themselves under the sole law of nature and without any guarantee of their reciprocal commitments, which is in every way repugnant to the civil state.

1762

Anthony van Dyck

Robert Rich (1587–1658), Second Earl of Warwick

Robert Rich (1587–1658), Second Earl of Warwick

ca. 1632–35

Today, the issue is not the existence or non-existence of God, but the existence or non-existence of man; we must concern ourselves [...] with the equality of men among themselves [...].

1841

It is because you are a fool that you are silent, but you are not a fool for being silent.

86-82 BC

Knowing no one more capable of reassuring us, we have resolved to entrust this care to [the chosen person].

1498

The wicked are strong only against those who resemble them.

1765-1769

Ulrich Apt the Elder

Portrait of a Married Couple (Lorenz Kraffter and Honesta Merz?)

Portrait of a Married Couple (Lorenz Kraffter and Honesta Merz?)

1512

It is therefore the people themselves who allow themselves to be, or rather cause themselves to be, dominated, since by ceasing to serve they would be free; it is the people who enslave themselves, who cut their own throats.

c. 1552-1553

In sum: the business of the senses is to perceive; that of the understanding, to think. Now, to think is to unite representations in a single consciousness.

1783

Universal Providence consists in the universe being in conformity with Intelligence, and Intelligence being anterior to the universe, [...] not in time, [...] but because Intelligence precedes by its nature the world which proceeds from it.

c. 253-270 AD

The bourgeoisie is bound to fear the stupidity of the masses so long as they remain conservative, and the intelligence of the masses as soon as they become revolutionary.

1851/1852

Greek Artist

Silvered bronze roundel with satyr head (one of a pair)

Silvered bronze roundel with satyr head (one of a pair)

ca. 325–300 BCE

And to avoid all disputes, [it is ordered] that [the portion] once started will be paid for as if it were fully consumed.

1662

Freedom, restored to commerce [...], was a benefit that could not be enjoyed as soon as it was granted. A word from the monarch had been able to annihilate this freedom; a word did not bring it back.

1776

The love of glory and reputation is another spring of our machine, which gives much force to the moral sentiment; it is the passion of great souls.

1751

The Mind [...] assembles under a single point of view things that are very distant, and independent of one another.

1689

Edouard Manet

George Moore (1852–1933)

George Moore (1852–1933)

1879

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

A true image in itself still displeases me when it is not in its place, when nothing leads to it or prepares it.

1772

[Theologians] are people of bad faith, who abuse the credulity of the people to insinuate to them what they please, as if the common folk were absolutely unworthy of the truth [...].

17th century

Preoccupied with learning what they do not know [...], men unlearn what they know (the natural truths of common sense).

4th century BC

Sano di Pietro (Ansano di Pietro di Mencio)

Madonna and Child

Madonna and Child

mid-15th century

Of all the sciences, morality is always the last to be perfected, always the least advanced, always the one on which opinions must be the most divided.

1797-1798

The brain, with its function of knowing, is basically just a lookout established by the will, to serve those of its ends which are located outside.

1819

It would seem we are applying the harshest regime to the least guilty, and reserving the mildest for the most criminal: which is [...] contrary to all principles of natural equity.

1864-1866

[To celebrate a] soul as universal as it is unique.

1718-1778

Sir David Wilkie

The Highland Family

The Highland Family

1824

The will is by its nature so free that it can never be constrained.

1649

When the soul is not corrupted, it does not need long speeches.

1263-1264

To limit ourselves to looking within would be to turn our gaze away from the very reality we must reach; it would make it impossible for us to understand anything of the movement that carries the world around us.

1922

That dishonest man has more than I! [...] It's because from the point of view of money, he is better than you; for he flatters, he is shameless, he works into the night.

c. 108 AD

Etruscan artist

Statuette of a girl

Statuette of a girl

ca. 550–500 BCE