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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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Through his abdication, Charles V in turn rose above fortune.

1636

By the way you eat, be useful to those who eat with you; by the way you drink, to those who drink: yield to them; practice self-denial; endure everything from them.

c. 108 AD

It is not possible [...] that evil be destroyed, for there must always be something contrary to the good; it is therefore a necessity that it circulates on this earth and around our mortal nature.

c. 253-270 AD

In times of trouble, the inhabitants of Paris were obliged, during the night, to place lit lanterns on their windows.

1662

Vincent van Gogh

Sunflowers

Sunflowers

1887

You think misfortune crushes him? Misfortune serves him.

63-64 AD

Neither intelligence nor pleasure can be the good, if they are lacking something.

c. 360 BC

A man [...] cannot, by any compact, bind his children or his posterity. For a son, when he is of age, being as free as his father ever was, no act of the father can [...] take away the son's liberty.

1690

The multitude believes more in persons than in things, and [...] is more persuaded by the authority of the speaker than by the reasons he gives.

c. 1552-1553

Camille Corot

Italian Landscape

Italian Landscape

ca. 1825–28

To believe that the existence of the world is explained by a creator is a psychological illusion.

1841

The value of the form can only be the value of the labor that provides it. It is the wage due to the worker.

1776

Those who have power [...] have the right to punish only on the condition that Christ truly dwells in their soul [...].

1962

We enjoy only people; the rest is nothing.

1746

Etruscan, Cerveteri

Terracotta antefix (roof tile) with head of a satyr

Terracotta antefix (roof tile) with head of a satyr

4th century BCE

The meditation of divine things should have made [a man] gentle and charitable; yet what comes from him often seems proud, fierce, and full of harshness.

1686

A person who might have an infinity of real causes for displeasure, but who would strive [...] to turn their imagination away from them, never thinking of them, except when the necessity of affairs would oblige it...

1643-1649

All prejudices come from the intestines.

1888

The mode of imprisonment and the duration of imprisonment are two correlative ideas that cannot be separated. [...] To modify the regime without touching the duration is to wish for the penal law to be either cruel or powerless.

1864-1866

El Greco (Domenikos Theotokopoulos)

Cardinal Fernando Niño de Guevara (1541–1609)

Cardinal Fernando Niño de Guevara (1541–1609)

ca. 1600

It is necessary that contraries be in the same genus, if there is no contrary to the genus.

End of the 4th century BC

[...] the paths through which the spirits flow are smoother and more united by the habit of practice[...]

1674-1675

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

[Their] tumultuous and incoherent beginnings are reminiscent of Flaubert's silent youth. [...] his first work was a masterpiece.

1926

Annibale Carracci

The Burial of Christ

The Burial of Christ

1595

He gave himself over to debauchery [...] whether to escape the sad reflections that assailed him when he was sober [...].

100-120 AD

Old fool [...] who eats without ploughing and dresses without spinning. You who claim that merely opening your lips [...] is enough to establish the distinction between good and evil.

4th century BC

It is the enjoying, not the possessing, that makes us happy.

1580

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

Cypriot artist

Horse and rider

Horse and rider

ca. 750–600 BCE

All these opinions are absolutely foreign to morality; one must be a good person [...] virtue is of all eternity.

1764

Any condensation of the social mass, especially if it is accompanied by an increase in population, necessarily determines the progress of the division of labor.

1893

The understanding [...] is the medium of motives, that is, the intermediary through which they act on the will, which is, properly speaking, the very core of man.

1839

The value and use of each part depends on the relation [...] to all the rest within reason itself, and, as in an organized body, the purpose of each member can only be deduced from the perfect concept of the whole.

1783

Cypriot artist

Limestone statuette of a male votary (worshipper)

Limestone statuette of a male votary (worshipper)

mid-6th century BCE

His fear was so great that, without considering whether it was possible or reasonable that it could be her, [...] he fled, trembling.

1518-1527

The interest of priests is not that the citizen acts well, but that he does not think.

1772

Is it any wonder that I love solitude? I see only animosity on the faces of men, & nature always smiles at me.

1776-1778

All the actions we produce [...] are of a more perfect nature the more capable they are of uniting with us so as to form [...] one and the same nature.

c. 1660

Unknown Artist

Spatula or curette

Spatula or curette

7000 BCE - 330 CE

Sciences and their inventions spread immediately and fly everywhere; for science is communicated as easily as light.

1609

[...] it is better to suffer an injury than to inflict one.

45 BC

Having recognized that the social antagonism of classes was at the bottom of all political struggles, it applied itself to studying the conditions under which one class of society can and must be called upon to represent the whole of the interests of a nation [...].

1851-1852

[Virtue] does not speak to us of superfluous austerities [...]; its sole project is to make its disciples and all men content, if possible, and to bring about their happiness at every moment of their existence.

1751

Johann Esaias Nilson

Portrait of a Man

Portrait of a Man

1741

We know that each Creature has a private Interest, a well-being of its own, towards which it strives with all its power.

1745

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

1890

Without me, you can do nothing.

1263-1264

Wherever men are ignorant, there will be prophets, inspired ones, miracle-workers; [...] this trade will always diminish in the same proportion as nations become enlightened.

1766

Julius Schrader

Baron Alexander von Humboldt (1769–1859)

Baron Alexander von Humboldt (1769–1859)

1859