Favorites About

Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

Français

This is not courage, it is recklessness; courage [...] scorns fatigue and danger for a useful motive, [...] recklessness braves fatigue without reason.

86-82 BC

It is impossible to honor those one despises, nor to willingly obey those one hates and holds in horror.

c. 1552-1553

[...] duration, whose essence is to flow ceaselessly, and to exist, consequently, only for a consciousness and a memory.

1890

Nor is it out of servile fear that the Turks and Russians fight with the ferocity and fury of lions and tigers; one does not thus have courage out of fear.

1764

Greek or Roman

Bronze statuette of Tyche/Fortuna

Bronze statuette of Tyche/Fortuna

ca. 1st century BCE–1st century CE

Obscurity is the kingdom of error.

1747

Those who have received an education recognize the obligation [...] to contribute to the formation of human beings.

1777

I desire neither reputation nor fortune, because these things do not bring happiness.

4th century BC

I would rather see my daughter dead than the wife of a tyrant.

100-120 AD

Thomas Hazlehurst

Agnes Sewell

Agnes Sewell

possibly ca. 1800

The Christian Religion is [...] the support of Society [...]. This is why [...] the Church has spies and forces parents, friends, and servants to inform on each other; which makes [...] the intercourse of life infinitely agreeable.

1768

It is not a new thing [...] to be separated from that of which you were a part. Willingly give up these limbs which are now useless.

63-64 AD

I cannot tire of admiring my work; I am drunk on self-love; I adore myself in what I have made.

1762

Are convents so essential to the constitution of a State? [...] and the human race of so many victims?

1760

Titian (Tiziano Vecellio)

Portrait of a Man

Portrait of a Man

ca. 1515

Happiness makes us more arrogant and more unreasonable.

329-323 BC

[...] divine or religious right is founded on a pact, without which there is no other right than natural right [...].

1670

Loyalty, generosity, the shame of a good reputation: these three things united in a single feeling—this is what we call noble, distinguished[...]

1881

The food that would satisfy a dwarf [...] would only whet the appetite of a giant.

1636

Marco di Paolo Veneziano

Madonna and Child Enthroned with Saints James Minor and Lucy

Madonna and Child Enthroned with Saints James Minor and Lucy

1362

Common faith is rekindled quite naturally within the reconstituted collectivity; it is reborn because it finds itself in the very conditions in which it was originally born.

1912

There are two publics: the one on which a journalist can have some influence, and the other, the one that makes serious reputations [...], the one that judges the judges.

1926

The most perfect being is always attached to humanity by a small corner of imperfection.

1896

It is said of you men [...] that your promises are long, and your loyalty is short.

1527

Hans Holbein the Younger

Portrait of a Man in Royal Livery

Portrait of a Man in Royal Livery

1532–35

Often what pleases them one day, displeases them the next; whatever efforts they make, it is not in their power to recall their past inclinations [...].

1742

The more often we have had any given perception, the more easily we recall its memory; but also the less this memory strikes and moves us.

1801

We call Good, all that is apt to produce Pleasure, and [...] Evil, what is apt to produce in us Pain.

1689

A dissonance that suddenly resolves into a chord makes the harmony more pleasing.

1623

Roman Artist

Marble fragments of a statue of the emperor Caracalla

Marble fragments of a statue of the emperor Caracalla

ca. 217–230 CE

Bentham's dictum, 'everybody to count for one, nobody for more than one,' might be written under the principle of utility as an explanatory commentary.

1861

No one should, for the love of life, resolve to live in servitude.

c. 387 BC

Every true conditional is necessary, and [...] every false conditional is impossible, because [...] the term of the consequent necessarily follows from the term of the antecedent.

c. 1270

It is solely the intoxication produced by the rapidity of technical progress that has given birth to the mad idea that work could one day become superfluous.

1934

Christian Friedrich Zincke

Portrait of a Man

Portrait of a Man

1703

The success of the best-organized geniuses depends entirely on the progress of language in the age in which they live.

1746

There is nothing profound and serious in man but holy poverty and renunciation, the fruitful sadness that turns into joy: all the rest is frivolity.

1670

He blindly follows what he believes to be my opinions [...] even though he does not understand them; thus he blindly contradicts them [...].

1643-1649

Light is entirely incorporeal, although it is the act of a body.

c. 253-270 AD

Etruscan artist

Bronze strainer

Bronze strainer

5th century BCE

If, like truth, a lie had but one face, we would be on better terms; for we would take as certain the opposite of what the liar said.

1580

Time has, in each century, presented some truths to men; but it still has many gifts left to give us.

1758

It is not in the history of the world [...] that one finds the idea of a plan and a whole realized, but in the life of the individual. Peoples exist only in abstracto: individuals are what is real.

1836

The simplicity of God's ways [...] properly applies to the means, while on the contrary, variety, richness, or abundance applies to the ends or effects.

1686

Vincent van Gogh

Sunflowers

Sunflowers

1887

[They seemed] to have taken on the task of solving this insoluble problem: namely, to govern by the majority, but against the majority's taste.

1893

Strong imaginations are extremely contagious; they dominate the weak ones; they gradually give them their same turns of thought and imprint their same characters upon them.

1674-1675

[The capitalist] sells not only what has cost him an equivalent, but also what has cost him nothing at all, although it has cost his worker's labor.

1865

You must absolutely and completely be in your soul [...] free or a slave, enlightened or ignorant.

c. 108 AD

Roman Artist

Key

Key

1st century CE