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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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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

passions act upon the imagination, and the corrupted imagination strives against reason [...].

1674-1675

Between neighboring peoples, trade tends to make the same things equally abundant [...] and consequently gives them the same value among all.

1776

Driven from treason to treason by some evil Genius.

100-120 AD

Greek Artist, Rhodian ?

Head of a comic figurine

Head of a comic figurine

late 4th–3rd century BCE

The straightest tree will be the first to be cut down. The well with the sweetest water will be the first to run dry. Your knowledge scares the ignorant, your enlightenment offends the fools.

4th century BC

[With fatal necessity], it follows from this that not a single man will be inexcusable before God.

1661-1676

Economists explain to us how production takes place in these given relations, but what they do not explain is how these relations themselves are produced, that is, the historical movement which gives them birth.

1847

Self-love, the different opposing interests [...], the discussions that result from them in society, have obliged men to establish the laws of justice, in order to preserve the advantages of mutual assistance and protection.

1751

Cypriot artist

Spearhead

Spearhead

3900 BCE - 100 CE

[...] the greatest probability never amounts to certainty, without which there can be no true Knowledge.

1689

After me, the flood.

55-56 AD

In Germany everyone is a prince; we have seen up to thirty highnesses of the same name having for all their wealth nothing but coats of arms and a noble pride.

1733

[...] a great part of these doubts, so difficult to clarify through metaphysics, even the most daring, are easily resolved by chemistry.

1770

Pieter van Slingelandt

Portrait of a Man

Portrait of a Man

ca. 1680

What is needed is an analysis, and one is sure to have perfectly analyzed when one is able to recompose.

1900

Verlaine, by the force of a superior idealism, crossed the painful distance in a single bound; or else he created around himself an invisible reality, as in his verses, a visible dream.

1926

It takes great qualities to make a hero.

1636

Feelings and ideas are renewed, the heart enlarged, and the human mind developed only by the reciprocal action of men upon one another.

1835-1840

Louis Marie Sicardi

Portrait of a Man

Portrait of a Man

ca. 1780

Reason is never but the last resort of love.

1772

Those who are capable of inventing are rare; those who do not invent are in greater number, and, consequently, the stronger [...].

1746

This is when a man is unhappy; this is when his city is taken by assault [...]: it is when his true opinions are taken from him and destroyed.

c. 108 AD

The most essential talent of a captain is to know how to seize opportunities when they arise and to act with diligence.

1580

Giovanni Battista Tiepolo

A Female Allegorical Figure

A Female Allegorical Figure

ca. 1740–50

It is [...] this capacity to isolate a partial idea, [...] to separate a subject from its attribute, in a word to abstract and to analyze [...], that animals lack, [...] and which constitutes the entire difference between them and us.

1803

The philosopher is to artists what a pentathlete is to a runner or a wrestler.

End of the 4th century BC

If his words remain only in memory, and no trace of them is found in life, the branch is no longer part of the vine, because it no longer draws its life from the root.

1263-1264

[...] metaphor, ornament, and the other forms [...] will remove vulgarity and baseness from the style; the proper term will give it clarity.

c. 335 BC

Greek Artist, South Italian, Tarentine

Terracotta appliqué

Terracotta appliqué

3rd century BCE

The idolatrous current of totalitarianism can only find an obstacle in an authentic spiritual life.

1943

Do all souls form a single soul?

c. 253-270 AD

How sweet it is to meet again after so long an absence and to renew an old friendship when one least thinks of it!

1627

The social subordination of women stands out as an isolated fact in the midst of modern social institutions; it is the only relic of an old intellectual and moral world destroyed everywhere else [...].

1869

Jacob de Wit

Flora and Zephyr

Flora and Zephyr

1743

April, the grace, and the smile [...], the scent and the sweet breath.

1546/1563

The inextinguishable regrets [...] have inspired in me a horror of lying that should have guaranteed my heart against this vice for the rest of my life.

1776-1778

The settlement of what belongs to them must be proportioned to what they had the right to hope from fortune, such that each finds it entirely equal to take what is assigned to him or to continue the adventure of the game.

1643-1662

The characteristic feature of Wagner's thought is its astonishing unity: a unity that connects writings from different eras [...] through the commonality of the point of view.

1896

Cypriot artist

Fragment of a limestone funerary stele with a disk and a crescent

Fragment of a limestone funerary stele with a disk and a crescent

2nd half of the 6th century BCE

The moralist must proceed in such a way as to take as obligatory only what is obligatory and not what seems so to him; that he should take as the subject of his research realities and not subjective appearances.

1893

The way of influence is that of the common philosophy; but, as one cannot conceive of material particles that could pass from one of these substances to the other, this view must be abandoned.

1696

The people, or the nobility, [...] showed all the more pride as their adversary showed more moderation.

1513-1519

There is no philosophical writer, with the exception of Aristotle, Descartes, and Locke, who can claim to approach Kant in the extent and height of influence he has exerted on the minds of men.

1827

Cypriot artist

Copper alloy spearhead

Copper alloy spearhead

ca. 2500–2000 BCE

From the moment the terrors of life outweigh the terrors of death, man puts an end to his existence.

1851

We no longer know how to forgive [...], and even the practice of condemning without a hearing has prevailed among us.

79 BC

If one has one's 'why?' of life, one can get along with almost any 'how?'.

1888

The mood to write verses comes from a strong agitation of the spirits [...] which only disposes one to poetry. [...] I take this transport as a mark of a stronger and more elevated mind than the common.

1643-1649

Minoan

Bronze tweezers

Bronze tweezers

ca. 2900–1050 BCE