Favorites About

Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

Français

Hunger becomes a permanent feeling. Is it more or less painful than working and eating? An unresolved question... Yes, more painful on the whole.

1934-1942

The imagination is perhaps excusable if it sometimes raves [...] But that the understanding, which ought to think, should rave, on the contrary, is something that can never be forgiven.

1783

No virtue remains hidden. [...] The day will come that, out of the darkness [...], must bring it to light.

63-64 AD

The chief defect of all hitherto existing materialism [...] is that the thing, reality, [...] is conceived only in the form of the object or of contemplation, but not as concrete human activity, not as practice.

1841

Cypriot artist

Picrolite figure

Picrolite figure

ca. 3900–2500 BCE

...my curiosity made me almost as ardent as him.

1643-1662

It would be useful for those who engage in inventing new machines if they knew nothing more of this matter than what I have just written about it [...].

1637

He is treated as he treated others.

1757-1758

The primitive principle of all our knowledge is the consciousness of our own existence, produced by the feeling of our simplest perceptions [...].

1805

Meyndert Hobbema

Entrance to a Village

Entrance to a Village

ca. 1665

Perception embraces [several systems] all at once. But the physicist cannot adopt them all together as a reference system: he necessarily chooses one of them.

1922

I do not know who first said that bees had a king. It was probably not a republican in whose head that idea originated.

1764

What knowledge of history [...]? But what an elevation of ideas on the true happiness of man! One sees from his way of thinking [...] that his life was in conformity with his doctrine.

45 BC

Our fathers did not have the word 'individualism' [...], but each of the thousand small groups that made up society thought only of itself. It was [...] a kind of collective individualism.

1856

Salomon van Ruysdael

A Country Road

A Country Road

1648

When the statesman despairs [...] it is then the clear eye of the artist that discerns the forms [...] of a full and complete humanity.

1896

Let men not flatter themselves [...] into imagining that after having distinguished themselves by a thousand proofs of talent and virtue they will be assured of general esteem.

1620

He who has modest tastes does not create trouble for himself; he who is concerned only with his inner progress is not affected by any deprivation.

4th century BC

It is to make oneself a slave against the will of God to submit to the false appearances of truth.

1674-1675

Simone Martini

Saint Andrew

Saint Andrew

ca. 1326

If it [the negative cult] prescribes that the faithful flee the profane world, it is to bring them closer to the sacred world.

1912

From the moment desire and fear are in your power, what can you still worry about?

c. 108 AD

Be resolved to serve no more, and you are at once free. [...] Do not support him any longer, and you will see him, like a great colossus whose pedestal has been pulled away, fall of his own weight and break in pieces.

c. 1552-1553

The struggle between Liberty and Authority is the most conspicuous feature in the portions of history with which we are familiar.

1859

Cypriot artist

Standing female figurine

Standing female figurine

ca. 600–480 BCE

[Propositions] are sometimes made by reason of concomitance, [...] sometimes by reason of cause.

c. 1270

Not every end is a goal. The end of the melody is not its goal; and yet, if the melody has not reached its end, it has not reached its goal. A symbol.

1879

[He] only said these things to draw the people's attention to himself. But the people were distracted by other speeches, other spectacles...

1926

Did you not know long ago that at the very moment of my birth, nature had pronounced my death sentence?

4th century BC

Unknown Artist

Element

Element

7000 BCE - 330 CE

As the gods acquire more knowledge and authority, they become more fearsome.

1757

If truly moral reasons against suicide exist, they must be sought at a depth that the probe of common morality cannot reach.

1840

He who considers the ardor with which everyone proposes himself as a model thinks he sees swimmers [...] crying out to one another: It is I whom you must follow.

1758

Imagine two clocks or watches that are in perfect agreement.

1696

Abraham Hondius

Christ among the Doctors

Christ among the Doctors

1668

What is beautiful and great but that which nature has made? What is deformed and weak but that which it has produced in its harshness?

1746

Evil, being but a corruption of the good, could only act or work upon a good foundation; [...] only good things are capable of being corrupted.

c. 253-270 AD

Whoever conceives the divine nature only in a confused way does not see that to exist belongs to the nature of God.

1670

[...] all [sensations] being necessarily pleasant or unpleasant, [the being] is interested in enjoying the ones and avoiding the others.

1754

Cypriot artist

Limestone funerary stele of a boy

Limestone funerary stele of a boy

3900 BCE - 100 CE

Just as the parts of the human body draw their nourishment and life from their union [...] so too whatever breaks the society of cities leads to their dissolution.

100-120 AD

One shall spend the greater part of one's time in adornment and grooming, under penalty [...] of not being looked at by any member of the society.

16th century

Although a happy quickness of mind is a gift of nature, art can nevertheless help and perfect it.

1636

The centuries devoid of science and industry were golden ages for the church of Jesus Christ.

1766

Cypriot artist

Limestone statuette of a temple girl

Limestone statuette of a temple girl

3rd century BCE–1st century CE

Whoever declares himself the protector of ignorance declares himself the enemy of the State.

1773

If I do not feel, how do you want me to love?

1580

Acting and being acted upon only occur in things that are contrary to each other, or that have a certain contrariety between them.

c. 350 B.C.E.

The power [...] of parents is [...] a natural government; but it in no way extends to the rights, ends, and jurisdiction of [...] political power.

1690

Philips Wouwerman

A Man and a Woman on Horseback

A Man and a Woman on Horseback

ca. 1653–54