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Dead Smart People

When you're tired of listening to living idiots.

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By nature, the city is a multitude; but if it strives for unity, from a city it becomes a family; from a family, an individual. [...] Were it possible to realize this system, it should be avoided, under penalty of annihilating the city.

c. 350 BCE

To reduce life to laws and methods is to take on a difficult task, and most often a frivolous one.

1742

Specialization, which makes the scholar sullen, makes science sterile.

1882

Nothing characterizes a bad reign like flattery carried to excess [...].

1746

Greek Artist, Attic

Fragmentary marble inscription

Fragmentary marble inscription

ca. 425–424 BCE

A miracle is an effect contrary to the constant laws of nature; consequently, God himself, without offending his wisdom, cannot perform miracles.

1766

One does not truly despise what one dares not despise to their face. Secret contempt is a proof of weakness [...].

1772

The savings bank system is a triple machine of despotism: [...] the savings bank is the golden chain by which the government holds a large part of the workers.

1849

The diversity of our opinions does not arise from some being more reasonable than others, but solely from the fact that we conduct our thoughts along different paths, and do not consider the same things.

1637

Cypriot artist

Limestone chest with incised decoration

Limestone chest with incised decoration

8th century BCE?

God is dead: but, given the way of men, there may still be caves for thousands of years in which his shadow will be shown.

1882

In the body of Tuo the Ugly, there lived a perfect latent virtue. It was this virtue that drew people to him, despite the repulsive form of his body.

4th century BC

Duration and movement are measured with the utmost precision, thanks to extension.

1817

A thousand signs show that the people of our time had long been starved of obedience. But this has been taken advantage of to give them slavery.

1943

Cypriot artist

Limestone statuette of a male votary

Limestone statuette of a male votary

probably mid-6th century BCE

Oh, how contrary are the wishes of those who love us, and all the more so when they are granted!

63-64 AD

It would be supremely absurd for the one who pursues a goal to achieve it less than the one who does not bother with it.

c. 108 AD

[He] found he had made too great an expense; and, wishing to share it with someone, he began to beg for a dinner guest.

1513-1527

It is not possible for men to conclude with certainty the degree of others' virtuous intentions from their actions. He who sees into the depths of our soul has reserved this judgment for Himself alone.

1763

Roman Artist

Marble portrait bust of a boy

Marble portrait bust of a boy

ca. 35–50 CE

There is a kind of ignorance that is born of extreme publicity.

1835-1840

It would be absurd to say that whoever writes in French thinks in French; character [...] does not transform as easily as language.

1926

Those who [...] take part in a race must indeed use all their strength to win [...]; but they are not permitted to lay a hand on them to stop them [...].

1580

The Bible does not owe its character as a holy book to the words and discourses it contains, or to the language in which it is written, but to the very things that intelligence discovers in it.

1670

Henri Fantin-Latour

Still Life with Flowers and Fruit

Still Life with Flowers and Fruit

1866

I am not a hack writer, a textbook manufacturer [...] I strive only for the truth.

1819

Not virtue itself, but the idea of virtue is innate.

1704

How has this stubborn will to serve become so deeply rooted that it now seems that the very love of liberty is not so natural.

c. 1552-1553

[Evil] consists in privation, that is, in what the efficient cause does not do. This is why the Scholastics used to call the cause of evil deficient.

c. 253-270 AD

Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo

The Departure of the Gondola

The Departure of the Gondola

mid-1760s

Error [...] consists only in a hasty consent of the will, which allows itself to be dazzled by some false glimmer.

1674-1675

I cannot see what I see; I see clearly only what I recall, and I have wit only in my memories.

1782-1789

The necessity of lighting the streets for a longer period of time was soon felt.

1662

Since nature has placed self-interest, pride, and all passions in the hearts of men, it is not surprising that we have seen [...] an almost continuous series of crimes and disasters.

1756

Cypriot artist

Axehead

Axehead

ca. 3200–2000 BCE

Any mediating being between God and the universe is therefore a being of the imagination.

1841

In a monarchy, judicial offices must be for sale; because if they were not, intrigue would sell them, and the administration of justice would be sheer robbery.

1776

To excel in theory, one must resolve to be inferior to many others in practice; and what one gains on one side, one loses on the other.

1609

The dreams of a sleeping man are composed, in my opinion, only of the ideas that this man has had while awake, although for the most part strangely joined together.

1689

Andrea di Bartolo

The Crucifixion

The Crucifixion

1389

In small towns, anyone who seeks to emancipate themselves from received customs meets with resistance that is sometimes very strong.

1893

[The people] were indignant at these disorders; and [the leader] neither ignored nor approved of them; but he was forced, to achieve his political ends, to use such agents.

100-120 AD

Society presents such a tranquil appearance that the soul, tired of tormenting itself, yields to a security that is treacherous, in truth, but almost impossible to resist.

1741-1784

If, by freely expressing [...] the opinion I have of myself, I must offend the judges, I would rather die [...].

4th century BC

Horace Hone

Portrait of a Woman, Said to Be Lady Agnes Anne Wrothesley

Portrait of a Woman, Said to Be Lady Agnes Anne Wrothesley

1791

Every person maintains that equality is dictated by justice, unless they think that utility requires inequality.

1861

There is a threefold whole: the universal, the potential, and the integral whole...

c. 1270

In these unfortunate times, they dare not raise their own voices to denounce the crime. [...] they remain silent, frightened by the danger.

79 BC

In man, the most elevated thing is a vast and luminous intelligence, the principle of his best-conducted operations [...].

1636

Greek Artist

Head of a marble Aphrodite statuette

Head of a marble Aphrodite statuette

3rd century BCE