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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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I knew that base passions seldom subjugate any but weak men, and have little hold on souls of a strong temper [...].

1782-1789

In a short time they become insolent, unless the heart is ill at ease when the countenance is at its best.

1759-1774

Citizens can rightly be judged equal, because the power of each of them, compared to the power of the State, ceases to be significant.

1677

The artistic sense of the contemporary public? It is synonymous with perfect obedience. I much prefer complete ignorance, the kind that leaves natural sensitivity or insensitivity intact.

1926

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

Mademoiselle Nys

Mademoiselle Nys

1899

The knowledge of all the opinions and judgments of other men [...] is not so much a science as a history.

1674-1675

Americans show by their practice that they feel the full necessity of moralizing democracy through religion.

1835-1840

[...] it is my soul that commands this bread, and not at all the bread that commands my soul [...] It is therefore feeling, and only feeling, that makes the difference between a divine bread and a profane bread [...].

1841

Education varies with social classes or even with habitats. The education of the city is not that of the countryside; that of the bourgeois is not that of the worker.

1922

Jacob van Ruisdael

Wheat Fields

Wheat Fields

ca. 1670

The wicked rule only through the cowardice of those who obey them: it is more just that it be so than otherwise.

c. 253-270 AD

[Faith] is a holy confidence in Priests, which makes us believe everything they say, even without understanding any of it. Its effects are to plunge one into a holy stupefaction accompanied by a pious stubbornness.

1768

We never see anything in this world but our own perceptions, and [...] all our knowledge consists only in the relationships we discover between them.

1805

Once one has acquired the habit of virtues, they become as many pleasures; whereas superstition is always odious and inconvenient.

1757

Cypriot artist

Terracotta plank-shaped figurine

Terracotta plank-shaped figurine

ca. 2000–1800 BCE

What is more rational than to see those who have worked for a thing have more of that thing for which they have worked?

c. 108 AD

Who can flatter themselves that they will read correctly?

1947

One must [...] obey the magistrates and the laws, especially the laws [...] established for the protection of the oppressed.

c. 387 BC

Either he is healthy, or he is sick; but he is not healthy, therefore he is sick.

c. 1270

Etruscan artist

Statuette of a bird

Statuette of a bird

900 BCE - 100 BCE

Whoever does not hate in himself this self-love, and this instinct which leads him to put himself above everything, is truly blind.

1670

If I have voluntarily braved so many dangers [...] it was so that every citizen would have the freedom to uphold the laws.

100-120 AD

Some fall asleep on the authority of prejudices and even admit contradictory ones, for want of going to the point where they contradict each other.

1746

If to have liberty it is necessary only to desire it, if only a simple act of will is needed, will there be any nation in the world that still deems it too expensive [...]?

c. 1552-1553

Henri Fantin-Latour

Roses in a Bowl

Roses in a Bowl

1883

If I doubt all other things, that very doubt convinces me of my own existence, and does not permit me to doubt it.

1689

I hold that the mark of a true idea is that one can prove its possibility, either a priori [...] or a posteriori.

1686

When we are inclined to regard extension as the subject of all sensible qualities, is it because it is indeed the subject, or only because this idea [...] is familiar to us?

1754

As for judging and criticizing me without submitting to this condition, nothing is easier, experience has proven it.

1819

Greek Artist, Laconian

Statuette of a runner

Statuette of a runner

7000 BCE - 30 BCE

Philosophy [...] is not a completed science, it is a science in the making; it is not organized.

c. 350 BC

Reason is never but the last resort of love.

1772

Instead of revenge [...], [the heroic heart] forgives an unjust hatred, and [...] even returns good for evil.

1636

There exist well-known [remedies]; but the gradation to be followed in administering them is so delicate [...] that very few people are able to benefit from them.

1623

Joseph Anton Koch

Heroic Landscape with Rainbow

Heroic Landscape with Rainbow

1824

Is it not likely that the Brahmans are the first legislators of the earth, the first philosophers, the first theologians?

1764

No one [...] brings himself to do evil without a motive of interest.

79 BC

I am not so accustomed to the favors of fortune as to expect anything extraordinary from it; it is enough for me when it does not send me [...] accidents that would give cause for sadness to the greatest philosopher in the world.

1643-1649

It is a very important thing in this world to know oneself, and to know how to measure one's strength against the greatness of one's State.

1512-1527

Martín Rico y Ortega

A Spanish Garden

A Spanish Garden

1871

Freedom of thought, when it goes so far as to wish to free itself from the very laws of reason, ends by destroying itself with its own hands.

1786

Divine love is not something of God: it is God himself.

1932

All prejudices come from the intestines.

1888

Our illness does not come from without; it is within us; its very seat is in our bowels.

63-64 AD

Cypriot artist

Limestone statuette of a boy holding a bird

Limestone statuette of a boy holding a bird

2nd half of the 5th century BCE

In Rome, it was a sign of favor to press down and lower the thumbs [...].

1580

[The government] constantly justified the suspicions [...] of the more revolutionary parties and constantly conjured up [...] the spectre of the old despotism.

1851-1852

It is universally admitted that partiality is incompatible with justice; preference given to one person over another, when there is no reason to prefer them, is unjust.

1861

One only succeeds on the condition of letting one's nature act. Constraint prevents success.

4th century BC

Roman Artist

Bronze statuette of a comic actor

Bronze statuette of a comic actor

ca. 1st–2nd century CE