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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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But, whether through nonchalance or extreme poverty, this useful regulation was only very imperfectly executed.

1662

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

It is from the bringing together of all these impressions and the combinations we make of them [...] that the perception or individual idea of an object is formed for us.

1805

Will you then never feel who you are, for what end you were born, and why you have received the gift of sight?

c. 108 AD

Greek Artist

Head of a marble Aphrodite statuette

Head of a marble Aphrodite statuette

3rd century BCE

When I make a wheel, [...] if I go at it, I know not how, the result will be in line with my ideal [...]. It's a knack that cannot be expressed.

4th century BC

Why be surprised [...] if the divinity judges it more advantageous for me to leave life at this very moment?

4th century BC

I have always thought that we must concern ourselves with peace, and I have seen with sorrow that it was rejected [...].

46 BC

Senseless plan, blind cruelty! Could not the Lord, who was able to resurrect a dead man, resurrect him if he were killed?

1263-1264

Greek Artist

Bronze handles of a hydria (water jar)

Bronze handles of a hydria (water jar)

early 5th century BCE

Is it outside of me or in me? asks [...] every man from whom a vision of this sort does not take away his composure.

1836

They willingly deny what they cannot understand: this gives them little faith for the extraordinary, and an almost invincible distaste for the supernatural.

1835-1840

But, as I do not know them, I cannot explain them, for I have no clear idea of my own mind[...]

1674-1675

All religions claim to emanate from heaven; all forbid the use of reason [...]; all claim to be true, to the exclusion of others.

1766

Cypriot artist

Limestone statuette of Geryon

Limestone statuette of Geryon

probably early 5th century BCE

One can act with one's instincts like a gardener and [...] cultivate the seeds of anger, pity, subtlety, vanity, to make them productive [...]. All this is open to us: but how many know that it is open to us?

1881

The publisher is the man with the money, and that is quite enough.

1741-1784

A [...] feeling of the inevitable necessity of dying incites men to aspire [...] to another kind of eternity, by immortalizing their name through actions [...] that leave a long memory.

1620

Vanity [...] consists in such an immoderate display of one's own advantages [...] that it can only offend others by shocking, without measure, their ambition and their secret vanity.

1751

Cypriot artist

Copper alloy dagger blade

Copper alloy dagger blade

ca. 2200–1800 BCE

Finding myself entirely destitute and empty of any other matter, I presented myself to myself as an argument and a subject.

1580

The Revolution [...] presented itself as the revolution of the working classes against the middle classes; it proclaimed the fall of the latter's government and the emancipation of the worker.

1851-1852

I think, therefore I am.

1637

[In myths] [...] that which is by nature eternal is said to be begotten and born.

c. 253-270 AD

Greek Artist, Cypriot

Arrowhead

Arrowhead

ca. 480–330 BCE

It seems that if [a philosopher] listened too much to his reason against the mysteries of one religion, he should have listened even more to that same reason [...] against the fables of another.

1764

I am bound not to rob, not to murder [...]; but why am I bound to promote the general happiness? If my own happiness lies in something else, why may I not give that the preference?

1861

The directing organ of social life can have absorbed all of the latter [...] without being very developed for that reason, if social life itself is not very developed.

1893

Whether men join this or that idea or not [...] makes no difference to essences, genera, or species, since it is only a matter of possibilities, which are independent of our thought.

1704

Carl Friedrich Thienpondt

Diana

Diana

ca. 1760

Fear is a pain or disturbance caused by the idea of a future evil, whether destructive or distressing.

329-323 BC

A man, however great he may be, [...] only holds his place in an immense cycle; he does not fill the entire cycle.

1926

Corinth had always shown a deep love for liberty, and an equally strong hatred for tyranny: it had undertaken almost all its wars [...] not to dominate peoples, [...] but in the interest of the freedom of the Greeks.

100-120 AD

There is no good but the true, but that which invites, which entices, is only plausible: it steals, it solicits, it carries away.

63-64 AD

Henri Fantin-Latour

Still Life with Flowers and Fruit

Still Life with Flowers and Fruit

1866

[Artistic thought is] an organic growth [...] in which what is new does not destroy what is old, but only expands it.

1896

[One must] discover an opportunity through which one could advance, with a small contribution, the greatest possible, most lasting, and general good.

1777

I believe [...] that God is, as they say, the immanent cause of all things and not the transitive cause.

1661-1676

Despair [...] is the greatest of our errors.

1746

Augustin Dubourg

Portrait of a Woman

Portrait of a Woman

1778

I conceive of two kinds of inequality in the human species: one, natural or physical, [...] the other, moral or political, because it depends on a kind of convention and is established [...] by the consent of men.

1755

April, the honor of the green, yellow, and blue-green meadows [...].

1546/1563

Prosperity [...] is but a fleeting state: it is a kind of game [...] where the most skillful is the one who knows when to quit while they're ahead.

1636

By this means [man] no more increases his knowledge than he increases his riches who, taking a bag of counters [...] names one a Crown, another a Pound [...] without however being richer by a mite.

1689

Italic

Bronze shield boss

Bronze shield boss

8th–7th century BCE

What makes us demand [...] singular characters and new situations? The desire to be moved.

1772

Taste is such a happy way of feeling that one perceives the value of things without the help of reflection [...].

1746

Agreement between several people contains a feeling of reality. [...] Deviation from this agreement appears as a sin.

1947

The two hypotheses are equivalent for the mathematician. But the same is not true for the philosopher.

1922

Cypriot artist

Buckle

Buckle

3900 BCE - 100 CE